| Literature DB >> 25271191 |
Serena Bonaretti1, Christof Seiler2, Christelle Boichon3, Mauricio Reyes4, Philippe Büchler4.
Abstract
Statistical appearance models have recently been introduced in bone mechanics to investigate bone geometry and mechanical properties in population studies. The establishment of accurate anatomical correspondences is a critical aspect for the construction of reliable models. Depending on the representation of a bone as an image or a mesh, correspondences are detected using image registration or mesh morphing. The objective of this study was to compare image-based and mesh-based statistical appearance models of the femur for finite element (FE) simulations. To this aim, (i) we compared correspondence detection methods on bone surface and in bone volume; (ii) we created an image-based and a mesh-based statistical appearance models from 130 images, which we validated using compactness, representation and generalization, and we analyzed the FE results on 50 recreated bones vs. original bones; (iii) we created 1000 new instances, and we compared the quality of the FE meshes. Results showed that the image-based approach was more accurate in volume correspondence detection and quality of FE meshes, whereas the mesh-based approach was more accurate for surface correspondence detection and model compactness. Based on our results, we recommend the use of image-based statistical appearance models for FE simulations of the femur. Published by Elsevier Ltd.Entities:
Keywords: Femur mechanics; Finite element simulations; Image registration; Mesh morphing; Statistical appearance model
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25271191 DOI: 10.1016/j.medengphy.2014.09.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Eng Phys ISSN: 1350-4533 Impact factor: 2.242