Intervertebral discs (IVD) provide flexibility to the back and ensure functional distributions of the spinal loads. They are avascular, and internal diffusion-dependent metabolic transport is vital to supply nutrients to disc cells1, but interactions with personalized IVD shapes and mechanics remain poorly explored. Poromechanical finite element models of seven personalized lumbar IVD geometries, with mean heights ranging from 8 to 16 mm were coupled with a reactive oxygen, glucose and lactate transport model linked with tissue deformations and osmosis . In previous studies, reduced formulations of the divergence of the solute flux (∇ .
This study investigates the relationships between Intervertebral Disc (IVD) morphology and biomechanics using patient-specific (PS) finite element (FE) models and poromechanical simulations. 169 3D lumbar IVD shapes from the European project MySpine (FP7-269909), spanning healthy to Pfirrmann grade 4 degeneration, were obtained from MRIs. A Bayesian Coherent Point Drift algorithm aligned meshes to a previously validated structural FE mesh of the IVD. After mesh quality analyses and Hausdorff distance measurements, mechanical simulations were performed: 8 and 16 hours of sleep and daytime, respectively, applying 0.11 and 0.54 MPa of pressure on the upper cartilage endplate (CEP). Simulation results were extracted from the anterior (ATZ) and posterior regions (PTZ) and the center of the nucleus pulposus (CNP). Data mining was performed using Linear Regression, Support Vector Machine, and eXtreme Gradient Boosting techniques. Mechanical variables of interest in DD, such as pore fluid velocity (FLVEL), water content, and swelling pressure, were examined. The morphological variables of the simulated discs were used as input features. Local morphological variables significantly impacted the local mechanical response. The local disc heights, respectively in the mid (mh), anterior (ah), and posterior (ph) regions, were key factors in general. Additionally, fluid transport, reflected by FLVEL, was greatly influenced (r2 0.69) by the shape of the upper and lower cartilage endplates (CEPs). This study suggests that disc morphology affects Mechanical variables of interest in DD. Attention should be paid to the antero-posterior distribution and local effects of disc heights. Surprisingly, the CEP morphology remotely affected the fluid transport in NP volumes around mid-height, and mechanobiological implications shall be explored. In conclusion, patient-specific IVD modeling has strong potential to unravel important correlations between IVD phenotypes and local tissue regulation.
Limb salvage surgery is a common treatment for patients who suffer from bone tumors. In the case of pelvic tumors this creates a challenge for the surgeon and the treatment remains controversial because the oncologic complications like local recurrence, dissemination and orthopaedic ones, like infection, haemorrhage, and mechanical problems of reconstructions Tumors affecting the acetabulum are a challenge for the surgeon because of the impact in the function of the extremity. There are many reconstruction techniques described in the literature like prosthesis, allograft systems, arthrodesis, etc…, but still there is not a gold standard due to the poor functional results at long term follow up, and the associated complications of all techniques. In this study we show the experience in our center on pelvic reconstructions after tumors affecting the acetabulum area (zone II). We surgically treated 81 pelvic tumors from 1997 to 2009 following the Enneking and Dunham calssification attending to the localization of the tumor: Zone I 38 (iliac bone)Zone II 25 (acetabulum)Zone III 18 (pelvic branches)In zone II tumors we performed pelvic reconstruction in eight cases, with different type of prosthesis. In 5 cases we performed saddle prosthesis (group A) and in 3 cases we performed Coned-Stanmore Implants type prosthesis with sacro-iliac anchorage. The mean follow up of the serie was 3,5 years (1–6 years). In group A the mean follow up was 5 years and in group A and in group B the mean follow up was 1 year due to the recent implantation in our center of Coned type prosthesis for pelvic reconstruction. We evaluated our results with these two types of prosthesis.INTRODUCTION
MATERIAL AND METHODS