Publication | Open Access
Development and validation of a computational model of the knee joint for the evaluation of surgical treatments for osteoarthritis
106
Citations
60
References
2014
Year
EngineeringComputational ModelMovement BiomechanicsSurgeryOrthopedic BiomechanicsOrthopaedic SurgeryMechanics ModelingBiomechanicsOsteoarthritisBiostatisticsModeling And SimulationComputational Knee ModelKinematicsArthroscopic TechniqueDeformation ModelingJoint ReplacementRheumatoid ArthritisMechanobiologySurgical TreatmentsWeight AcceptanceMusculoskeletal ImagingRobotic TechnologyMechanical DesignKnee InjuriesMusculoskeletal FunctionKnee ModelKnee JointApplied NeuromechanicsMusculoskeletal SurgeryMedicine
A three-dimensional (3D) knee joint computational model was developed and validated to predict knee joint contact forces and pressures for different degrees of malalignment. A 3D computational knee model was created from high-resolution radiological images to emulate passive sagittal rotation (full-extension to 65°-flexion) and weight acceptance. A cadaveric knee mounted on a six-degree-of-freedom robot was subjected to matching boundary and loading conditions. A ligament-tuning process minimised kinematic differences between the robotically loaded cadaver specimen and the finite element (FE) model. The model was validated by measured intra-articular force and pressure measurements. Percent full scale error between FE-predicted and in vitro-measured values in the medial and lateral compartments were 6.67% and 5.94%, respectively, for normalised peak pressure values, and 7.56% and 4.48%, respectively, for normalised force values. The knee model can accurately predict normalised intra-articular pressure and forces for different loading conditions and could be further developed for subject-specific surgical planning.
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