Computer Methods in Biomechanics and Biomedical Engineering: Imaging & Visualization (Dec 2024)
Accuracy and precision of internal displacement and strain measurements in long human bones using HR-pQCT and digital volume correlation
Abstract
Digital volume correlation (DVC) is a technique for measuring 3D, internal displacements and strains in loaded structures. One application of DVC is the study of internal bone mechanics and the validation of subject-specific finite element (FE) models. While micro-computed tomography (µCT) is a common choice for DVC studies of small samples of bone, long human bones such as the tibia may exceed the spatial limitations of conventional µCT. High resolution peripheral quantitative CT (HR-pQCT) scanners, with their large bore and open-ended design, may be a viable option for long-bone DVC. However, HR-pQCT is afflicted by stitching artefacts, caused by the stacking of scan blocks to form the large scan volume, resulting in erroneous steps in DVC displacements and bands of increased strain error. This study proposed a modified HR-pQCT scanning protocol and stitching methodology to mitigate the effects of stitching artefacts on DVC measurements of displacement and strain. With the application of the proposed scanning/stitching methodology, displacements greater than 11.7µm (0.29 voxels) and strains greater than 1633µε could be repeatedly measured by DVC. These results show that HR-pQCT combined with DVC is suitable for measuring internal bone displacements in long human bones with sub-voxel precision and strains greater than 1633µε.
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