Resumen:
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Consulta en la Biblioteca ETSI Industriales (7986)
[EN] The strength of our bone results from a complex combination of different
quantities like shape, mass, architecture and material properties. The role of
the inner trabecular architecture is crucial in osteoporotic ...[+]
[EN] The strength of our bone results from a complex combination of different
quantities like shape, mass, architecture and material properties. The role of
the inner trabecular architecture is crucial in osteoporotic individuals which have,
together with a decreased bone mass, a strong deterioration of the trabecular
network. The impairment at the trabecular level could lead to a local increase of
stresses and strains and the regions subjected to these localizations could be
¿weak points¿ in the structure since they could initiate and/or propagate bone
failure. Employing image guided failure assessment (IGFA), an experiment
technique which combines mechanical testing with ¿CT measurements,
trabecular failure has indeed been observed to be local and to start from
individual elements.
The main goal of the proposed research project is to investigate the possible
link between geometrically weak elements and localization phenomena in real
trabecular networks. For this purpose ¿CT images of human bone samples will
be analyzed with local morphology in order to distinguish between rod-like or
plate-like trabeculae and to extract geometrical parameters like trabecular
thickness, trabecular length, trabecular orientation and trabecular volume on an
individual base. After the morphological characterization, the same voxel-based
dataset will be converted into elements and the internal distributions of stresses
and strains will be computed with the finite element method implemented in a
home made code (ParFE). A preliminary study is needed to asses the influence
of the finite-element resolution on local mechanical quantities computed at the
trabecular level (e.g., mean stress, mean strain or mean strain energy absorbed
in single trabecula).
The results of this kind of analysis will be plots where a geometrical quantity
(e.g., trabecular thickness, slenderness ratio, trabecular volume) is plotted on
the x-axis while a mechanical quantity (e.g., maximum strain, strain energy
density) is plotted on the y-axis. This kind of plots should help to answer the
following questions:
¿ Which type of correlation exists between geometrical and mechanical
aspect at a structural level of single trabeculae?
¿ Are there different correlations for healthy or osteoporotic architectures?
¿ Which geometrical quantities (e.g., trabecular thickness, slenderness
ratio, etc.) have more influence on the local mechanical behaviour?
¿ How are mechanical quantities like stresses or strain locally redistributed
in the neighbourhood of trabeculae which are geometrically weak?
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