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Journal Article

Citation

del Palomar AP, Calvo B, Doblaré M. J. Biomech. 2008; 41(3): 523-531.

Affiliation

Group of Structural Mechanics and Materials Modeling (GEMM), Aragón Institute of Engineering Research (I3A), University of Zaragoza, Spain. amaya@unizar.es

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jbiomech.2007.10.012

PMID

18061196

Abstract

Cervical disc injury due to impact has been observed in clinical and biomechanical investigations; however, there is a lack of data that helps to elucidate the mechanisms of disc injury during these collisions. Therefore, it is necessary to understand the behavior of the cervical spine under different types of loading situations. A three dimensional finite element (FE) model for the multi-level cervical spine segment (C0-C7) was developed using computed tomography (CT) data and applied to study the internal stresses and strains of the intervertebral discs under quasi-static loading conditions. The intervertebral discs were treated as nonlinear, anisotropic and incompressible subjected to large deformations. The model accuracy was validated by comparing it with previously published experimental and numerical results for different movements. It was shown that the use of a fiber reinforced model to describe the behavior of the annulus of the discs would predict higher maximum shear strains than an isotropic one, being therefore important the use of complex constitutive models in order to be able to detect the appearance of injured zones, since those strains and stresses are supposed to be related with damage to soft tissues. Several movements were analyzed: flexion, extension and axial rotation, obtaining that the maximum shear stresses in the disc were higher for a flexo-extension movement.


Language: en

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