WIT Press


Analysis, Simulation And Prediction Of Contact Stresses In Articular Cartilage Of The Knee Joint

Price

Free (open access)

Volume

12

Pages

10

Published

2007

Size

2,580 kb

Paper DOI

10.2495/BIO070061

Copyright

WIT Press

Author(s)

A. Vidal, R. Lesso, R. Rodríguez, S. García & L. Daza

Abstract

Articular cartilage (AC) has an essential function in the best performance of the human body’s joints, but it has a limited capacity of regeneration and the initial cause that develops the pathological degenerative process is still unknown. It is believed that cartilage damage due to knee osteoarthritis is mechanically induced. Thus, to investigate such a phenomenon and analyze and simulate the biomechanical behavior of the knee joint, a virtual 3D knee prototype was created using a commercial finite element code, which includes the femur, tibia and AC as a deformable solid model. This paper shows the stress distribution found in AC in the femur and the tibia. The factors were obtained by applying a load range of 700 to 2800 N, 0º in flexion and different cases with physiological valgus variation and a graphical model of stress prediction to the femur cartilage was created using the stress behavior with the different factors. In general, the results show that different factors like being overweight (load> 700N) and misalignment (valgus variation) could damage the AC because they increase the stress magnitude and it comes into the cyclic damage range (5–10 MPa), which progressively produces articular cartilage damage and enhances the osteoarthritis phenomenon due to mechanical factors. Keywords: articular cartilage damage, finite element analysis, contact element, biomechanics, knee joint, osteoarthritis, physiological valgus. 1 Introduction The knee is one of the most important joints of human body. It allows, with its flexion-extension movement, the displacement of the body. The human knee joint is composed mainly of the femur, tibia, patella, menisci and articular cartilage.

Keywords

articular cartilage damage, finite element analysis, contact element, biomechanics, knee joint, osteoarthritis, physiological valgus.