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Three dimensional patient-specific collagen architecture modulates cartilage responses in the knee joint during gait

Author

Listed:
  • Lasse P. Räsänen
  • Mika E. Mononen
  • Eveliina Lammentausta
  • Miika T. Nieminen
  • Jukka S. Jurvelin
  • Rami K. Korhonen

Abstract

Site-specific variation of collagen fibril orientations can affect cartilage stresses in knee joints. However, this has not been confirmed by 3-D analyses. Therefore, we present a novel method for evaluation of the effect of patient-specific collagen architecture on time-dependent mechanical responses of knee joint cartilage during gait. 3-D finite element (FE) models of a human knee joint were created with the collagen architectures obtained from T2 mapped MRI (patient-specific model) and from literature (literature model). The effect of accuracy of the implementation of collagen fibril architecture into the model was examined by using a submodel with denser FE mesh. Compared to the literature model, fibril strains and maximum principal stresses were reduced especially in the superficial/middle regions of medial tibial cartilage in the patient-specific model after the loading response of gait (up to −413 and −26%, respectively). Compared to the more coarsely meshed joint model, the patient-specific submodel demonstrated similar strain and stress distributions but increased values particularly in the superficial cartilage regions (especially stresses increased >60%). The results demonstrate that implementation of subject-specific collagen architecture of cartilage in 3-D modulates location- and time-dependent mechanical responses of human knee joint cartilage. Submodeling with more accurate implementation of collagen fibril architecture alters cartilage stresses particularly in the superficial/middle tissue.

Suggested Citation

  • Lasse P. Räsänen & Mika E. Mononen & Eveliina Lammentausta & Miika T. Nieminen & Jukka S. Jurvelin & Rami K. Korhonen, 2016. "Three dimensional patient-specific collagen architecture modulates cartilage responses in the knee joint during gait," Computer Methods in Biomechanics and Biomedical Engineering, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 19(11), pages 1225-1240, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:gcmbxx:v:19:y:2016:i:11:p:1225-1240
    DOI: 10.1080/10255842.2015.1124269
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