4.2 Article

Effect of microcomputed tomography voxel size on the finite element model accuracy for human cancellous bone

出版社

ASME
DOI: 10.1115/1.1835346

关键词

microcomputed tomography; finite element method; voxel size; element size; boundary conditions; accuracy; trabecular bone

资金

  1. NIAMS NIH HHS [AR40776, AR049343] Funding Source: Medline

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The level of structural detail that can be acquired and incorporated in a finite element (FE) analysis might greatly influence the results of microcomputed tomography (ACT)based FE simulations, especially when relatively large bones, such as whole vertebrae, are of concern. We evaluated the effect of scanning and reconstruction voxel size on the ACT-based FE analyses of human cancellous tissue samples for fixed- and free-end boundary conditions using different combinations of scan/reconstruction voxel size. We found that the bone volume fraction (BV/TV) did not differ considerably between images scanned at 21 and 50 mu m and reconstructed at 21, 50, or 110 mu m (-0.5% to 7.8% change from the 21/21 mu m case). For the images scanned and reconstructed at 110 mu m, however there was a large increase in BV/TV compared to the 21121 pin case (58.7%). Fixed-end boundary conditions resulted in 1.8% [coefficient of variation (COV)] to 14.6% (E) difference from the free-end case. Dependence of model output parameters on scanning and reconstruction voxel size was similar between free- and fixed-end simulations. Up to 26%, 30%, 17.8%, and 32.3% difference in modulus (E), and average (VMExp), standard deviation (VMSD) and coefficient of variation (COV) of von Mises stresses, respectively, was observed between the 21/21 Am case and other scan/reconstruction combinations wt. thin the same (free or fixed) simulation group. Observed differences were largely attributable to scanning resolution, although reconstruction resolution also contributed significantly at the largest voxel sizes. All 21/21 mu m results (taken as the gold standard) could be predicted from the 21/50 (r(adj)(2) -0.91-0.99; p < 0.001), 21/110 (r(adj)(2) = 0.58-0.99; p < 0.02) and 50/50 results (r(adj)(2) = 0.61-0.97;p < 0.02). While BV/TV VMSD, and VMExp/sigma(2), from the 21/21 could be predicted by those from the 50/110 (r(adj)(2) = 0.63-0.93; p < 0.02) and 110/110 (r(adj)(2) =0.41-0.77,-p < 0.05) simulations as well, Prediction of E, VMExp, and COV became marginally significant (0.04 < p < 0.13) at 50/110 and nonsignificant at 110/110 (0.21 < p < 0.70). In conclusion, calculation of cancellous bone modulus, mean trabecular stress, and other parameters are subject to large errors at 110/110 Am voxel size. However enough microstructural details for studying bone volume fraction, trabecular shear stress scatter, and trabecular shear stress amplification (VMExp/sigma(2),) can be resolved using a 21/110 mu m, 50/110 mu m, and 110/110 mu m voxels for both free- and fixed-end constraints.

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