Literature DB >> 21744922

Transversely isotropic elasticity imaging of cancellous bone.

Spencer W Shore1, Paul E Barbone, Assad A Oberai, Elise F Morgan.   

Abstract

To measure spatial variations in mechanical properties of biological materials, prior studies have typically performed mechanical tests on excised specimens of tissue. Less invasive measurements, however, are preferable in many applications, such as patient-specific modeling, disease diagnosis, and tracking of age- or damage-related degradation of mechanical properties. Elasticity imaging (elastography) is a nondestructive imaging method in which the distribution of elastic properties throughout a specimen can be reconstructed from measured strain or displacement fields. To date, most work in elasticity imaging has concerned incompressible, isotropic materials. This study presents an extension of elasticity imaging to three-dimensional, compressible, transversely isotropic materials. The formulation and solution of an inverse problem for an anisotropic tissue subjected to a combination of quasi-static loads is described, and an optimization and regularization strategy that indirectly obtains the solution to the inverse problem is presented. Several applications of transversely isotropic elasticity imaging to cancellous bone from the human vertebra are then considered. The feasibility of using isotropic elasticity imaging to obtain meaningful reconstructions of the distribution of material properties for vertebral cancellous bone from experiment is established. However, using simulation, it is shown that an isotropic reconstruction is not appropriate for anisotropic materials. It is further shown that the transversely isotropic method identifies a solution that predicts the measured displacements, reveals regions of low stiffness, and recovers all five elastic parameters with approximately 10% error. The recovery of a given elastic parameter is found to require the presence of its corresponding strain (e.g., a deformation that generates ɛ₁₂ is necessary to reconstruct C₁₂₁₂), and the application of regularization is shown to improve accuracy. Finally, the effects of noise on reconstruction quality is demonstrated and a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of 40 dB is identified as a reasonable threshold for obtaining accurate reconstructions from experimental data. This study demonstrates that given an appropriate set of displacement fields, level of regularization, and signal strength, the transversely isotropic method can recover the relative magnitudes of all five elastic parameters without an independent measurement of stress. The quality of the reconstructions improves with increasing contrast, magnitude of deformation, and asymmetry in the distributions of material properties, indicating that elasticity imaging of cancellous bone could be a useful tool in laboratory studies to monitor the progression of damage and disease in this tissue.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21744922      PMCID: PMC3379555          DOI: 10.1115/1.4004231

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomech Eng        ISSN: 0148-0731            Impact factor:   2.097


  20 in total

1.  Dependence of yield strain of human trabecular bone on anatomic site.

Authors:  E F Morgan; T M Keaveny
Journal:  J Biomech       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 2.712

2.  Evaluation of the adjoint equation based algorithm for elasticity imaging.

Authors:  Assad A Oberai; Nachiket H Gokhale; Marvin M Doyley; Jeffrey C Bamber
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2004-07-07       Impact factor: 3.609

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Authors:  E Verhulp; B van Rietbergen; R Huiskes
Journal:  J Biomech       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 2.712

4.  Generalized anisotropic inverse mechanics for soft tissues.

Authors:  Ramesh Raghupathy; Victor H Barocas
Journal:  J Biomech Eng       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 2.097

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Journal:  Ultrason Imaging       Date:  1991-04       Impact factor: 1.578

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Journal:  Ultrasound Med Biol       Date:  1996       Impact factor: 2.998

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Journal:  J Biomech       Date:  1988       Impact factor: 2.712

8.  Mechanical property distributions in the cancellous bone of the human proximal femur.

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Journal:  Acta Orthop Scand       Date:  1980-06

9.  Time-lapsed microstructural imaging of bone failure behavior.

Authors:  Ara Nazarian; Ralph Müller
Journal:  J Biomech       Date:  2004-01       Impact factor: 2.712

10.  In vivo measurement of human tibial strains during vigorous activity.

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Journal:  Bone       Date:  1996-05       Impact factor: 4.398

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  2 in total

1.  Direct Error in Constitutive Equation Formulation for Plane stress Inverse Elasticity Problem.

Authors:  Olalekan A Babaniyi; Assad A Oberai; Paul E Barbone
Journal:  Comput Methods Appl Mech Eng       Date:  2017-02-01       Impact factor: 6.756

2.  Noninvasive In-Vivo Quantification of Mechanical Heterogeneity of Invasive Breast Carcinomas.

Authors:  Tengxiao Liu; Olalekan A Babaniyi; Timothy J Hall; Paul E Barbone; Assad A Oberai
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-07-08       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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