4.6 Article

The denticulate ligament - Tensile characterisation and finite element micro-scale model of the structure stabilising spinal cord

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2018.11.017

关键词

Denticulate ligament; Spinal cord; Spinal cord injury; Biomechanics; Finite Element modelling; Micro-structural model

资金

  1. Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education [0401/0009/18]

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Background: Damage to the spinal cord is one of the most debilitating pathologies with considerable health, economic and social impact. Improved prevention, treatment and rehabilitation after spinal cord injury (SCI) requires the complex biomechanics of the spinal cord with all its structural elements and the injury mechanism to be understood. This comprehensive understanding will also allow development of models and tools enabling better diagnosis, surgical treatment with increased safety and efficacy and possible development of regenerative therapies. The denticulate ligaments play an important role in stabilising spinal cord within the spinal canal. They participate in spinal cord movements and play a role in determining the stress distribution during physiological but also traumatic loading. We present detailed tensile characterisation of the denticulate ligaments and a Finite Element micro-scale model of the ligament relating its structure with the distribution of stress under physiological loading. Method: Denticulate ligaments were dissected from cervical spinal levels from 6 porcine cervical specimens with fragments of the pia and dura mater and characterised in terms of their geometry and response to uniaxial tensile loading. The stress-strain characteristics were recorded until rupture of the ligament, ultimate parameters and Young's moduli were determined. The parametric micro-structural Finite Element model was constructed based on literature microscope and histological images of a denticulate ligament as a phenomenological representation of the complex microstructure of a soft tissue. The model was validated against the experimental data. Results: Stress-strain characteristics obtained in tensile test were typical for a soft tissue behaviour. No statistically relevant differences in ultimate strength, strain and Young's moduli were observed between the ligaments harvested from different vertebral levels. Average ultimate tensile stress was 1.26 +/- 0.20 MPa at strain 0.51 +/- 0.00, rupturing force (1.01 +/- 0.21 N) was in agreement with results obtained previously. The Finite Element model accurately predicted the extension-load behaviour of the denticulate ligament in elastic regime. The micro-scale structural representation enabled capturing deformation modes representative of the experimentally observed behaviour. Conclusions: The presented stress-strain characteristics of the denticulate ligaments add valuable data to the understanding of the biomechanics of the spinal cord and enable development of more accurate models. The developed micro-scale model was capable of capturing biomechanical response of collagenous tissue under tensile loading, it can be applied for the prediction of other soft tissues behaviours. The denticulate ligament model should be included into future spinal cord models to fully represent the complex system's biomechanics and enable development of surgical aid tools to improve patient outcomes and future regenerative therapies.

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