AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed how ligaments affect the strength of functional spine units (FSUs) using finite element analysis based on MDCT scans of cadaveric specimens from 16 donors.
  • Two models of FSUs were created: one including ligaments and one without, allowing for a comparison of their failure loads through both FE simulations and physical testing.
  • Results showed that the FE models with ligaments had a closer correlation to experimental data, indicating ligaments play a significant role in FSU strength, suggesting a need for further research on their contributions.

Article Abstract

(1) Objective: This study aimed to analyze the effect of ligaments on the strength of functional spine unit (FSU) assessed by finite element (FE) analysis of anatomical models developed from multi-detector computed tomography (MDCT) data. (2) Methods: MDCT scans for cadaveric specimens were acquired from 16 donors (7 males, mean age of 84.29 ± 6.06 years and 9 females, mean age of 81.00 ± 11.52 years). Two sets of FSU models (three vertebrae + two disks), one with and another without (w/o) ligaments, were generated. The vertebrae were segmented semi-automatically, intervertebral disks (IVD) were generated manually, and ligaments were modeled based on the anatomical location. FE-predicted failure loads of FSU models (with and w/o ligaments) were compared with the experimental failure loads obtained from the uniaxial biomechanical test of specimens. (3) Results: The mean and standard deviation of the experimental failure load of FSU specimens was 3513 ± 1029 N, whereas of FE-based failure loads were 2942 ± 943 N and 2537 ± 929 N for FSU models with ligaments and without ligament attachments, respectively. A good correlation (ρ = 0.79, and ρ = 0.75) was observed between the experimental and FE-based failure loads for the FSU model with and with ligaments, respectively. (4) Conclusions: The FE-based FSU model can be used to determine bone strength, and the ligaments seem to have an effect on the model accuracy for the failure load calculation; further studies are needed to understand the contribution of ligaments.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8510093PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14195791DOI Listing

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