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Impact of knee geometry on joint contact mechanics after meniscectomy. | LitMetric

Impact of knee geometry on joint contact mechanics after meniscectomy.

Sci Rep

Department of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive, N.W., Calgary, AB, T2N 1N4, Canada.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Finite element modeling is crucial to understanding knee mechanics after meniscectomy, but the effects of different knee shapes have not been fully explored.
  • This study used MRI data from 31 human knees to create models that represent various knee geometries and performed simulations to assess the impact of different meniscectomy conditions.
  • Findings showed that changes in knee geometry significantly affect load distribution and pressure on cartilage, indicating that individual knee shape plays a key role in clinical outcomes after meniscus surgery.

Article Abstract

Finite element modeling has served as a cornerstone in understanding knee joint mechanics post-meniscectomy, yet the influence of varying knee geometries remains unknown. The present study aimed to fill that gap by employing statistical shape modeling to generate knee models from MRI data of 31 human knees, capturing the population's knee size and shape variations. Finite element simulations were conducted to replicate intact, partial, and total medial meniscectomy conditions during standing. The results revealed a substantial shift in load distribution from the medial to lateral compartment following medial meniscectomy with its magnitude depending on knee geometry. Cartilages experienced variable degrees of pressure changes at different sites, which could also be different for fluid and contact pressures. While changes in joint size led to somewhat predictable alterations in contact pressure, variations in joint shape resulted in unexpected changes in contact and fluid pressures, emphasizing the need for computational simulations. The average knee geometry exhibited the lowest contact and fluid pressures under the given loading and boundary conditions, in contrast to knees with shapes deviating from the average. This study highlights the significance of individual knee shape in the biomechanical outcome of meniscectomy, potentially explaining the variability in clinical outcomes observed post-surgery.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11576876PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-79662-yDOI Listing

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