THE MICROMECHANICS OF CORTICAL SHELL REMOVAL IN THE HUMAN VERTEBRAL
BODY
S.K. Eswaran, H.H. Bayraktar, M.F. Adams, A. Gupta, P.F. Hoffmann,
D.C. Lee, P. Papadopoulos and T.M. Keaveny
Comp. Meth. Appl. Mech. Engrg., 196, pp. 3025-3032, (2007)
Abstract
An improved understanding of the biomechanical role of the vertebral cortical
shell with respect to the trabecular bone may improve diagnosis of
osteoporosis and provide insight into the effects of disease, aging, and drug
treatments. In this study, we present results from finite element simulations
of removal of the shell from the vertebral body and its mechanical effects in
terms of overall change in vertebral structural stiffness and of the
tissue-level stresses. Specimen-specific micro-mechanical finite element
models of thirteen vertebrae were generated from 20-micron resolution micro-CT
scans. Al algorithm was developed to automatically isolate the thin (and
discontinuous) shell and the images were converted into finite element models
by mapping each image voxel into a finite element. Compressive loading
conditions were applied and linear elastic analyses were run for three cases -
with and without the shell, and shell-only models. The models contained up to
13.6 million element and were solved using a maximum of 144 CPUs in parallel
and 300 GB memory, and a custom code with a parallel mesh partitioner and
algebraic multigrid solver. Results indicated that the shell was on average,
038 +- 0.06 mm thick, accounted for 21-39% of the overall bone mass, but
accounted for 38-68% of the overall vertebral stiffness. Examination of the
tissue level stresses indicated that this disproportionately large mechanical
effect of shell removal was due in part to unloading of the remaining
peripheral trabeculae adjacent to the shell. Stress paths were also
preferentially within vertically aligned bone: the cortical shell and
vertically aligned trabeculae. Taken together, these results demonstrate two
important roles of the thin vertebral cortical shell: it can carry significant
load by virtue of representing a large proportion of the vertically aligned
bone tissue withing the vertebra, and, as a shell, it also maximizes the load
carrying capacity of the trabecular centrum, particularly around the
periphery.
(If your institution subscribes to the electronic version of the journal,
click
here
for a copy of this article.)