Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
Department of Orthopedics and Rehabilitation, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA; Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater. 2022 Feb;126:104984. doi: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2021.104984. Epub 2021 Nov 24.
Developing a shear wave tensiometer capable of non-invasively measuring ligament tension holds promise for enhancing research and clinical assessments of ligament function. Such development would benefit from tunable test specimens fabricated from well-characterized and consistent materials. Although previous work found that yarn can replicate the mechanical behavior of collateral ligaments, it is not obvious whether yarn-based phantoms would be suitable for development of a shear wave tensiometer for measuring ligament tension. Accordingly, the primary objective of this study was to characterize the mechanical properties and shear wave speed - stress relationships of ligament phantoms fabricated from yarn and silicone, and compare these results to published data from biological ligaments. We measured the mechanical properties and shear wave speeds during axial loading in nine phantoms with systematically varied material properties. We performed a simple linear regression between shear wave speed squared and axial stress to determine the shear wave speed - stress relationship for each phantom. We found comparable elastic moduli, hysteresis, and shear wave speed squared - stress regression parameters between the phantoms and collateral ligaments. For example, the ranges of the coefficients of determination (R) and slopes across the nine phantoms were 0.84-0.95, and 0.78-1.27 kPa/m/s, respectively, which overlapped with the ranges found in a prior study in porcine collateral ligaments (0.84-0.996 and 0.34-1.18 kPa/m/s, respectively). Additionally, the shear wave speed squared - stress regression parameters varied predictably with the density of the phantom and the shear modulus of the silicone. In summary, we found that yarn-based phantoms serve as mechanical analogs for ligaments (i.e., are ligament mimicking), and thus, should prove beneficial for investigations into ligament structure-function relationships and in the development of a shear wave tensiometer for measuring ligament tension.
开发一种能够无创测量韧带张力的切变波张力计有望提高对韧带功能的研究和临床评估。这种开发将受益于由具有良好特征和一致性的材料制成的可调测试样本。尽管之前的工作发现纱线可以复制侧副韧带的机械行为,但纱线基幻象是否适合开发用于测量韧带张力的切变波张力计尚不清楚。因此,本研究的主要目的是表征由纱线和硅酮制成的韧带幻象的机械性能和切变波速度-应力关系,并将这些结果与生物韧带的已发表数据进行比较。我们在 9 个具有系统变化材料特性的幻像中测量了轴向加载下的机械性能和切变波速度。我们在每个幻像中进行了简单的线性回归,以确定切变波速度与轴向应力的关系。我们发现幻像和侧副韧带之间具有可比的弹性模量、滞后和切变波速度平方-应力回归参数。例如,在九个幻像中,决定系数 (R) 和斜率的范围分别为 0.84-0.95 和 0.78-1.27 kPa/m/s,与先前在猪侧副韧带中的研究范围重叠(分别为 0.84-0.996 和 0.34-1.18 kPa/m/s)。此外,切变波速度平方-应力回归参数随幻像密度和硅酮剪切模量的变化可预测。总之,我们发现纱线基幻象是韧带的机械模拟物(即,模仿韧带),因此,应该有助于研究韧带的结构-功能关系,并开发用于测量韧带张力的切变波张力计。