4.3 Article

Development of a parametric finite element model of the proximal femur using statistical shape and density modelling

Journal

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10255842.2010.515984

Keywords

fracture risk; bone strength; finite element model; statistical shape model; parametric model

Funding

  1. SwRI [R9541]
  2. NIH/NIAMS [AR052013]

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Skeletal fractures associated with bone mass loss are a major clinical problem and economic burden, and lead to significant morbidity and mortality in the ageing population. Clinical image-based measures of bone mass show only moderate correlative strength with bone strength. However, engineering models derived from clinical image data predict bone strength with significantly greater accuracy. Currently, image-based finite element (FE) models are time consuming to construct and are non-parametric. The goal of this study was to develop a parametric proximal femur FE model based on a statistical shape and density model (SSDM) derived from clinical image data. A small number of independent SSDM parameters described the shape and bone density distribution of a set of cadaver femurs and captured the variability affecting proximal femur FE strength predictions. Finally, a three-dimensional FE model of an 'unknown' femur was reconstructed from the SSDM with an average spatial error of 0.016 mm and an average bone density error of 0.037 g/cm(3).

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