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  3. μCT-based trabecular anisotropy can be reproducibly computed from HR-pQCT scans using the triangulated bone surface
 

μCT-based trabecular anisotropy can be reproducibly computed from HR-pQCT scans using the triangulated bone surface

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.96021
Date of Publication
January 17, 2017
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für chirurgi...

Author
Seyed Hosseini, Hadi
Institut für chirurgische Technologien und Biomechanik (ISTB)
Maquer, Ghislain Bernard
Institut für chirurgische Technologien und Biomechanik (ISTB)
Zysset, Philippeorcid-logo
Institut für chirurgische Technologien und Biomechanik (ISTB)
Subject(s)

500 - Science::570 - ...

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Bone
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
8756-3282
Publisher
Elsevier
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.bone.2017.01.016
PubMed ID
28109918
Description
The trabecular structure can be assessed at the wrist or tibia via high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT). Yet on this modality, the performance of the existing methods, evaluating trabecular anisotropy is usually overlooked, especially in terms of reproducibility. We thus proposed to compare the TRI routine used by SCANCO Medical AG (Brüttisellen, Switzerland), the classical mean intercept length (MIL), and the grey-level structure tensor (GST) to the mean surface length (MSL), a new method for evaluating a second-order fabric tensor based on the triangulation of the bone surface. The distal radius of 24 fresh-frozen human forearms was scanned three times via HR-pQCT protocols (61 μm, 82 μm nominal voxel size), dissected, and imaged via micro computed tomography (μCT) at 16 μm nominal voxel size. After registering the scans, we compared for each resolution the fabric tensors, determined by the mentioned techniques for 182 trabecular regions of interest. We then evaluated the reproducibility of the fabric information measured by HR-pQCT via precision errors. On μCT, TRI and GST were respectively the best and worst surrogates for MILμCT (MIL computed on μCT) in terms of eigenvalues and main direction of anisotropy. On HR-pQCT, however, MSL provided the best approximation of MILμCT. Surprisingly, surface-based approaches (TRI, MSL) also proved to be more precise than both MIL and GST. Our findings confirm that MSL can reproducibly estimate MILμCT, the current gold standard. MSL thus enables the direct mapping of the fabric-dependent material properties required in homogenised HR-pQCT-based finite element models.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/150156
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Hosseini2017.pdftextAdobe PDF1.38 MBpublisherpublished restricted
Hosseini2017-Accepted_Manuscript.pdftextAdobe PDF1.06 MBAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)acceptedOpen
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