Cartilage and labrum mechanics in the normal and pathomorphologic human hip

Update Item Information
Publication Type dissertation
School or College College of Engineering
Department Biomedical Engineering
Author Henak, Corinne Reid
Title Cartilage and labrum mechanics in the normal and pathomorphologic human hip
Date 2013-08
Description While the healthy hip provides decades of pain free articulation, the cartilage and labrum may degenerate during the process of osteoarthritis (OA). Most hip OA is caused by subtle pathomorphologies, including acetabular dysplasia and acetabular retroversion. The link between pathomorphology and OA is thought to be mechanical, but the mechanics have not been quantified. The aim of this dissertation was to provide insight into the pathogenesis of hip OA via finite element (FE) modeling. The objectives were two-fold: to validate a subject-specific modeling protocol for a series of specimens and assess the effects of assumptions on model predictions, and to use the modeling protocol to evaluate soft tissue mechanics in pathomorphologic hips in comparison to normal hips. For the first objective, FE predictions of contact stress and contact area were directly validated for five cadaveric specimens, and the specimen- and region-specific hyperelastic material behavior of cartilage was determined. FE predictions of contact stress and contact area were in good agreement with experimental results, and were relatively insensitive to the assumed cartilage constitutive model. There were distinct regional differences in the hyperelastic material behavior of human hip cartilage, with stiffer lateral than medial cartilage and stiffer acetabular than femoral cartilage. In order to investigate the mechanical link between pathomorphology and hip OA, FE models of ten hips with normal morphology, ten hips with acetabular dysplasia and ten hips with acetabular retroversion were generated. FE models of dysplastic acetabula demonstrated the importance of the acetabular labrum in load support in the dysplastic hip. FE models of retroverted acetabula demonstrated distinct superomedial contact patterns in comparison to distributed contact patterns in the normal hip. Finally, the effects of cartilage constitutive model on predictions of transchondral maximum shear stress and first principal strain were evaluated. In contrast to contact stress and contact area, maximum shear stress and first principal strain were sensitive to the cartilage constitutive model. Overall, this dissertation provides novel insights into the contact mechanics of pathomorphologic hips that may be important in the pathogenesis of OA, as well as the technical foundation for studies evaluating additional mechanical variables in the human hip.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Cartilage; Dysplasia; Finite element; Hip; Labrum; Retroversion
Dissertation Institution University of Utah
Dissertation Name Doctor of Philosophy
Language eng
Rights Management Copyright © Corinne Reid Henak 2013
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 3,198,800 bytes
Identifier etd3/id/2531
ARK ark:/87278/s6mw5r93
Setname ir_etd
ID 196107
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6mw5r93
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