Literature DB >> 35832297

Damage Accumulation Modeling and Rate Dependency of Spinal Dura Mater.

Nicole Ramo1, Snehal S Shetye2, Christian M Puttlitz3.   

Abstract

As the strongest of the meningeal tissues, the spinal dura mater plays an important role in the overall behavior of the spinal cord-meningeal complex (SCM). It follows that the accumulation of damage affects the dura mater's ability to protect the cord from excessive mechanical loads. Unfortunately, current computational investigations of spinal cord injury (SCI) etiology typically do not include postyield behavior. Therefore, a more detailed description of the material behavior of the spinal dura mater, including characterization of damage accumulation, is required to comprehensively study SCI. Continuum mechanics-based viscoelastic damage theories have been previously applied to other biological tissues; however, the current work is the first to report damage accumulation modeling in a tissue of the SCM complex. Longitudinal (i.e., cranial-to-caudal long-axis) samples of ovine cervical dura mater were tensioned-to-failure at one of three strain rates (quasi-static, 0.05/s, and 0.3/s). The resulting stress-strain data were fit to a hyperelastic continuum damage model to characterize the strain-rate-dependent subfailure and failure behavior. The results show that the damage behavior of the fibrous and matrix components of the dura mater are strain-rate dependent, with distinct behaviors when exposed to strain rates above that experienced during normal voluntary neck motion suggesting the possible existence of a protective mechanism.
Copyright © 2018 by ASME.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biomechanics; constitutive modeling of materials; damage modeling; dura mater; mechanical behavior

Year:  2017        PMID: 35832297      PMCID: PMC8597561          DOI: 10.1115/1.4038261

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Eng Sci Med Diagn Ther        ISSN: 2572-7958


  37 in total

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Authors:  Matthew Szarko; Ken Muldrew; John Ea Bertram
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Authors:  Kaori Suto; Ken Urabe; Kouji Naruse; Kentaro Uchida; Terumasa Matsuura; Yuko Mikuni-Takagaki; Mitsutoshi Suto; Noriko Nemoto; Kentaro Kamiya; Moritoshi Itoman
Journal:  Cell Tissue Bank       Date:  2010-11-30       Impact factor: 1.522

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