Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Queen's University, McLaughlin Hall 305, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
J Biomech. 2011 Mar 15;44(5):935-42. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2010.11.029. Epub 2010 Dec 14.
The law of bone remodeling, commonly referred to as Wolff's Law, asserts that the internal trabecular bone adapts to external loadings, reorienting with the principal stress trajectories to maximize mechanical efficiency creating a naturally optimum structure. The goal of the current study was to utilize an advanced structural optimization algorithm, called design space optimization (DSO), to perform a micro-level three-dimensional finite element bone remodeling simulation on the human proximal femur and analyse the results to determine the validity of Wolff's hypothesis. DSO optimizes the layout of material by iteratively distributing it into the areas of highest loading, while simultaneously changing the design domain to increase computational efficiency. The result is a "fully stressed" structure with minimized compliance and increased stiffness. The large-scale computational simulation utilized a 175 μm mesh resolution and the routine daily loading activities of walking and stair climbing. The resulting anisotropic trabecular architecture was compared to both Wolff's trajectory hypothesis and natural femur samples from literature using a variety of visualization techniques, including radiography and computed tomography (CT). The results qualitatively revealed several anisotropic trabecular regions, that were comparable to the natural human femurs. Quantitatively, the various regional bone volume fractions from the computational results were consistent with quantitative CT analyses. The global strain energy proceeded to become more uniform during optimization; implying increased mechanical efficiency was achieved. The realistic simulated trabecular geometry suggests that the DSO method can accurately predict bone adaptation due to mechanical loading and that the proximal femur is an optimum structure as the Wolff hypothesized.
骨骼重建定律,通常被称为沃尔夫定律,它指出,内部骨小梁会适应外部负荷,沿着主应力轨迹重新定向,以最大限度地提高机械效率,从而形成自然的最佳结构。本研究的目的是利用一种先进的结构优化算法,称为设计空间优化(DSO),对人体股骨近端进行微观三维有限元骨骼重建模拟,并分析结果以确定沃尔夫假设的有效性。DSO 通过迭代将材料分布到高负荷区域来优化材料的布局,同时改变设计域以提高计算效率。结果是一个“完全受力”的结构,具有最小的柔顺性和增加的刚度。大规模的计算模拟使用了 175μm 的网格分辨率和步行和爬楼梯等日常活动的常规日常加载。利用各种可视化技术,包括射线照相术和计算机断层扫描(CT),将得到的各向异性小梁结构与沃尔夫轨迹假说和文献中的自然股骨样本进行了比较。结果定性地揭示了几个各向异性的小梁区域,与自然人类股骨相似。定量地,计算结果的各个区域骨体积分数与定量 CT 分析一致。全局应变能在优化过程中变得更加均匀;这意味着实现了更高的机械效率。真实模拟的小梁几何形状表明,DSO 方法可以准确预测由于机械加载引起的骨骼适应,并且正如沃尔夫假设的那样,股骨近端是一种最佳结构。