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Biomechanical validation of novel polyurethane-resin synthetic osteoporotic femoral bones in axial compression, four-point bending and torsion.

Marianne HollensteinerSabrina SandriesserJessica LibertLily Spitzer-VanechDirk BaumeisterMarkus GreinwaldMischa MühlingPeter Augat
Published in: Medical engineering & physics (2024)
In addition to human donor bones, bone models made of synthetic materials are the gold standard substitutes for biomechanical testing of osteosyntheses. However, commercially available artificial bone models are not able to adequately reproduce the mechanical properties of human bone, especially not human osteoporotic bone. To overcome this issue, new types of polyurethane-based synthetic osteoporotic bone models have been developed. Its base materials for the cancellous bone portion and for the cortical portion have already been morphologically and mechanically validated against human bone. Thus, the aim of this study was to combine the two validated base materials for the two bone components to produce femur models with real human geometry, one with a hollow intramedullary canal and one with an intramedullary canal filled with synthetic cancellous bone, and mechanically validate them in comparison to fresh frozen human bone. These custom-made synthetic bone models were fabricated from a computer-tomography data set in a 2-step casting process to achieve not only the real geometry but also realistic cortical thicknesses of the femur. The synthetic bones were tested for axial compression, four-point bending in two planes, and torsion and validated against human osteoporotic bone. The results showed that the mechanical properties of the polyurethane-based synthetic bone models with hollow intramedullary canals are in the range of those of the human osteoporotic femur. Both, the femur models with the hollow and spongy-bone-filled intramedullary canal, showed no substantial differences in bending stiffness and axial compression stiffness compared to human osteoporotic bone. Torsional stiffnesses were slightly higher but within the range of human osteoporotic femurs. Concluding, this study shows that the innovative polyurethane-based femur models are comparable to human bones in terms of bending, axial compression, and torsional stiffness.
Keyphrases
  • bone mineral density
  • endothelial cells
  • postmenopausal women
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • body composition
  • pluripotent stem cells
  • soft tissue
  • bone regeneration
  • bone loss
  • machine learning
  • tissue engineering