首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 78 毫秒
1.
The spatial distribution and pattern of local contact stresses within the knee joint during activities of daily living have not been fully investigated. The objective of this study was to determine if common contact stress patterns exist on the tibial plateaus of human knees during simulated gait. To test this hypothesis, we developed a novel normalized cross-correlation (NCC) algorithm and applied it to the contact stresses on the tibial plateaus of 12 human cadaveric knees subjected to multi-directional loads mimicking gait. The contact stress profiles at different locations on the tibial plateaus were compared, where regions with similar contact stress patterns were identified across specimens. Three consistent regional patterns were found, among them two most prominent contact stress patterns were shared by 9–12 of all the knees and the third pattern was shared by 6–8 knees. The first pattern was located at the posterior aspect of the medial tibial plateau and had a single peak stress that occurred during the early stance phase. The second pattern was located at the central-posterior aspects of the lateral plateau and consisted of two peak stresses coincident with the timing of peak axial force at early and late stance. The third pattern was found on the anterior aspect of cartilage-to-cartilage contact region on the medial plateau consisted of double peak stresses. The differences in the location and profile of the contact stress patterns suggest that the medial and lateral menisci function to carry load at different points in the gait cycle: with the posterior aspect of the medial meniscus consistently distributing load only during the early phase of stance, and the posterior aspect of the lateral meniscus consistently distributing load during both the early and late phases of stance. This novel approach can help identify abnormalities in knee contact mechanics and provide a better understanding of the mechanical pathways leading to post-traumatic osteoarthritis.  相似文献   

2.
The goal of this study is to quantify changes in knee joint contact behavior following varying degrees of the medial partial meniscectomy. A previously validated 3D finite element model was used to simulate 11 different meniscectomies. The accompanying changes in the contact pressure on the superior surface of the menisci and tibial plateau were quantified as was the axial strain in the menisci and articular cartilage. The percentage of medial meniscus removed was linearly correlated with maximum contact pressure, mean contact pressure, and contact area. The lateral hemi-joint was minimally affected by the simulated medial meniscectomies. The location of maximum strain and location of maximum contact pressure did not change with varying degrees of partial medial meniscectomy. When 60% of the medial meniscus was removed, contact pressures increased 65% on the remaining medial meniscus and 55% on the medial tibial plateau. These data will be helpful for assessing potential complications with the surgical treatment of meniscal tears. Additionally, these data provide insight into the role of mechanical loading in the etiology of post-meniscectomy osteoarthritis.  相似文献   

3.
Studies of the load transfer role of the meniscus have been limited to static experimental and analytical approaches. The objective of this study was to develop an experimental technique to allow the contact pressures on the tibial plateau of cadaveric knees to be measured under dynamic physiological loads. Accordingly, we adapted a load-controlled knee joint simulator to accept a cadaveric sheep knee, programmed the simulator with sheep gait kinematics data, and utilized a pressure sensor array to measure the contact pressure distribution on the lateral tibial plateau during gait. The technique was applied to six sheep knees that were tested intact and after meniscectomy. Meniscectomy resulted in a 267% increase in average contact pressure, a 117% increase in peak contact pressure, and an 80% decrease in contact area, all measured at the point of maximum peak contact stress in the gait cycle. It is envisaged that the experimental model herein developed will allow for the screening of candidate materials prior to more expensive and time-consuming animal models.  相似文献   

4.
It has been suggested that the repetitive nature of altered joint tissue loading which occurs after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) rupture can contribute to the development of osteoarthritis (OA). However, changes in dynamic knee joint contact stresses after ACL rupture have not been quantified for activities of daily living. Our objective was to characterize changes in dynamic contact stress profiles that occur across the tibial plateau immediately after ACL transection. By subjecting sensor-augmented cadaveric knees to simulated gait, and analyzing the resulting contact stress profiles using a normalized cross-correlation algorithm, we tested the hypothesis that common changes in dynamic contact stress profiles exist after ACL injury. Three common profiles were identified in intact knees, occurring on the: (I) posterior lateral plateau, (II) posterior medial plateau, and (III) central region of the medial plateau. In ACL-transected knees, the magnitude and shape of the common dynamic stress profiles did not change, but their locations on the tibial plateau and the number of knees identified for each profile changed. Furthermore, in the ACL transected knees, a unique common contact stress profile was identified in the posterior region of the lateral plateau near the tibial spine. This framework can be used to understand the regional and temporal changes in joint mechanics after injury.  相似文献   

5.
Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is believed to result from high levels of contact stresses on the articular cartilage and meniscus after meniscal damage. This study investigated the effect of meniscal tears and partial meniscectomies on the peak compressive and shear stresses in the human knee joint. An elaborate three-dimensional finite element model of knee joint including bones, articular cartilages, menisci and main ligaments was developed from computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging images. This model was used to model four types of meniscal tears and their resultant partial meniscectomies and analysed under an axial 1150 N load at 0° flexion. Three different conditions were compared: a healthy knee joint, a knee joint with medial meniscal tears and a knee joint following partial meniscectomies. The numerical results showed that each meniscal tear and its resultant partial meniscectomy led to an increase in the peak compressive and shear stresses on the articular cartilages and meniscus in the medial knee compartment, especially for partial meniscectomy. Among the four types of meniscal tears, the oblique tear resulted in the highest values of the peak compressive and shear stresses. For the four partial meniscectomies, longitudinal meniscectomy led to the largest increase in these two stresses. The lateral compartment was minimally affected by all the simulations. The results of this study demonstrate meniscal tear and its resultant partial meniscectomy has a positive impact on the maintenance of high levels of contact stresses, which may improve the progression of knee OA, especially for partial meniscectomy. Surgeons should adopt a prudent strategy to preserve the greatest amount of meniscus possible.  相似文献   

6.
To understand the mechanical consequences of knee injury requires a detailed analysis of the effect of that injury on joint contact mechanics during activities of daily living. Three-dimensional (3D) knee joint geometric models have been combined with knee joint kinematics to dynamically estimate the location of joint contact during physiological activities—using a weighted center of proximity (WCoP) method. However, the relationship between the estimated WCoP and the actual location of contact has not been defined. The objective of this study was to assess the relationship between knee joint contact location as estimated using the image-based WCoP method, and a directly measured weighted center of contact (WCoC) method during simulated walking. To achieve this goal, we created knee specific models of six human cadaveric knees from magnetic resonance imaging. All knees were then subjected to physiological loads on a knee simulator intended to mimic gait. Knee joint motion was captured using a motion capture system. Knee joint contact stresses were synchronously recorded using a thin electronic sensor throughout gait, and used to compute WCoC for the medial and lateral plateaus of each knee. WCoP was calculated by combining knee kinematics with the MRI-based knee specific model. Both metrics were compared throughout gait using linear regression. The anteroposterior (AP) location of WCoP was significantly correlated with that of WCoC on both tibial plateaus in all specimens (p<0.01, 95% confidence interval of Pearson?s coefficient r>0), but the correlation was not significant in the mediolateral (ML) direction for 4/6 knees (p>0.05). Our study demonstrates that while the location of joint contact obtained from 3D knee joint contact model, using the WCoP method, is significantly correlated with the location of actual contact stresses in the AP direction, that relationship is less certain in the ML direction.  相似文献   

7.
Spontaneous cartilage degeneration of the femorotibial joint of male Hartley guinea pigs, 61 to 365 days old, was studied by light microscopy (LM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to determine the incidence, age at onset, and to characterize the early changes. Knee joints of 61 day old animals were histologically and ultrastructurally normal. Focal minimal degeneration characterized by cell and proteoglycan loss with surface fibrillation was first observed by LM on the medial tibial plateau (MTP) in two of five 89 day old animals. Mild lesions characterized by focal surface disruption, primarily in the area of medial tibial plateau not covered by the meniscus, were observed in three of five 89 day old animals by SEM. Light microscopic alterations in knee joints of 4, 5, and 6 month old animals consisted of varying degrees of focal chondrocyte death, decreased toluidine blue matrix staining, and surface fibrillation. Small chondrocytic clones were first observed in medial tibial cartilage of 6 month old animals with moderate focal degeneration. Ultrastructurally, 4, 5, and 6 month old animals generally had moderate to severe fibrillation involving primarily the area of the medial tibial plateau not covered by the meniscus. Tibial osteophyte formation, mild synovial hyperplasia, medial femoral and meniscal cartilage degeneration, were first seen by LM in 9 month old animals. Lesions in 1 year old animals were similar, but more severe and included subchondral sclerosis of medial tibial and femoral bone. Bilateral fibrillation of greater than 50% of the medial tibial articular surface was observed in all 1 year old animals by SEM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Site-specific variation of collagen fibril orientations can affect cartilage stresses in knee joints. However, this has not been confirmed by 3-D analyses. Therefore, we present a novel method for evaluation of the effect of patient-specific collagen architecture on time-dependent mechanical responses of knee joint cartilage during gait. 3-D finite element (FE) models of a human knee joint were created with the collagen architectures obtained from T2 mapped MRI (patient-specific model) and from literature (literature model). The effect of accuracy of the implementation of collagen fibril architecture into the model was examined by using a submodel with denser FE mesh. Compared to the literature model, fibril strains and maximum principal stresses were reduced especially in the superficial/middle regions of medial tibial cartilage in the patient-specific model after the loading response of gait (up to ?413 and ?26%, respectively). Compared to the more coarsely meshed joint model, the patient-specific submodel demonstrated similar strain and stress distributions but increased values particularly in the superficial cartilage regions (especially stresses increased >60%). The results demonstrate that implementation of subject-specific collagen architecture of cartilage in 3-D modulates location- and time-dependent mechanical responses of human knee joint cartilage. Submodeling with more accurate implementation of collagen fibril architecture alters cartilage stresses particularly in the superficial/middle tissue.  相似文献   

9.
A lack of initial stability of the fixation is associated with aseptic loosening of the tibial components of cementless knee prostheses. With sufficient stability after surgery, minimal relative motion between the prosthesis and bone interfaces allows osseointegation to occur thereby providing a strong prosthesis-to-bone biological attachment. Finite element modelling was used to investigate the bone–prosthesis interface micromotion and the relative risk of aseptic loosening. It was anticipated that by prescribing different joint loads representing gait and other activities, and the consideration of varying tibial–femoral contact points during knee flexion, it would influence the computational prediction of the interface micromotion. In this study, three-dimensional finite element models were set up with applied loads representing walking and stair climbing, and the relative micromotions were predicted. These results were correlated to in-vitro measurements and to the results of prior retrieval studies. Two load conditions, (i) a generic vertical joint load of 3×body weight with 70%/30% M/L load share and antero-posterior/medial-lateral shear forces, acted at the centres of the medial and lateral compartments of the tibial tray, and (ii) a peak vertical joint load at 25% of the stair climbing cycle with corresponding antero-posterior shear force applied at the tibial–femoral contact points of the specific knee flexion angle, were found to generate interface micromotion responses which corresponded to in-vivo observations. The study also found that different loads altered the interface micromotion predicted, so caution is needed when comparing the fixation performance of various reported cementless tibial prosthetic designs if each design was evaluated with a different loading condition.  相似文献   

10.
The knowledge of articular cartilage contact biomechanics in the knee joint is important for understanding the joint function and cartilage pathology. However, the in vivo tibiofemoral articular cartilage contact biomechanics during gait remains unknown. The objective of this study was to determine the in vivo tibiofemoral cartilage contact biomechanics during the stance phase of treadmill gait. Eight healthy knees were magnetic resonance (MR) scanned and imaged with a dual fluoroscopic system during gait on a treadmill. The tibia, femur and associated cartilage were constructed from the MR images and combined with the dual fluoroscopic images to determine in vivo cartilage contact deformation during the stance phase of gait. Throughout the stance phase of gait, the magnitude of peak compartmental contact deformation ranged between 7% and 23% of the resting cartilage thickness and occurred at regions with thicker cartilage. Its excursions in the anteroposterior direction were greater in the medial tibiofemoral compartment as compared to those in the lateral compartment. The contact areas throughout the stance phase were greater in the medial compartment than in the lateral compartment. The information on in vivo tibiofemoral cartilage contact biomechanics during gait could be used to provide physiological boundaries for in vitro testing of cartilage. Also, the data on location and magnitude of deformation among non-diseased knees during gait could identify where loading and later injury might occur in diseased knees.  相似文献   

11.
Cartilage contact geometry, along with joint loading, can play an important role in determining local articular cartilage tissue stress. Thus individual variations in cartilage thickness can be associated with both individual variations in joint loading associated with activities of daily living as well as individual differences in the anatomy of the contacting surfaces of the joint. The purpose of this study was to isolate the relationship between cartilage thickness predicted by individual variations in contact surface geometry based on the radii of the femur and tibia vs. cartilage thickness predicted by individual variations in joint loading. Knee magnetic resonance (MR) images and the peak knee adduction moments during walking were obtained from 11 young healthy male subjects (age 30.5+/-5.1 years). The cartilage thicknesses and surface radii of the femoral and tibial cartilage were measured in the weight-bearing regions of the medial and lateral compartments of three-dimensional models from the MR images. The ratio of contact pressure between the medial and lateral compartments was calculated from the radii of tibiofemoral contact surface geometries. The results showed that the medial to lateral pressure ratios were not correlated with the medial to lateral cartilage thickness ratios. However, in general, pressure was higher in the lateral than medial compartments and cartilage was thicker in the lateral than medial compartments. The peak knee adduction moment showed a significant positive linear correlation with medial to lateral thickness ratio in both femur (R(2)=0.43,P<0.01) and tibia (R(2)=0.32,P<0.01). The results of this study suggest that the dynamics of walking is an important factor to describe individual differences in cartilage thickness for normal subjects.  相似文献   

12.
In vivo tibiofemoral contact analysis using 3D MRI-based knee models   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
This paper quantified the motion of the tibiofemoral contact points during in vivo weight bearing flexion using MRI- based 3D knee models and two orthogonal fluoroscopic images. The contact points on the medial and lateral tibial plateau were calculated by finding the centroid of the intersection of the tibial and femoral cartilage layers and by using the bony geometry alone. Our results indicate that the medial femoral condyle remains in the central portion of the tibial plateau and the lateral condyle translates posteriorly with increasing flexion. Using the bony contact model increased the total translation of the medial and lateral condyles by 250 and 55%, respectively, compared to the cartilage contact model. These results suggest that using the bony geometry alone may not accurately represent the articular surfaces of the knee. Articular cartilage geometry may have to be used to accurately quantify tibiofemoral contact.  相似文献   

13.
Detailed knowledge about loading of the knee joint is essential for preclinical testing of implants, validation of musculoskeletal models and biomechanical understanding of the knee joint. The contact forces and moments acting on the tibial component were therefore measured in 5 subjects in vivo by an instrumented knee implant during various activities of daily living.Average peak resultant forces, in percent of body weight, were highest during stair descending (346% BW), followed by stair ascending (316% BW), level walking (261% BW), one legged stance (259% BW), knee bending (253% BW), standing up (246% BW), sitting down (225% BW) and two legged stance (107% BW). Peak shear forces were about 10–20 times smaller than the axial force. Resultant forces acted almost vertically on the tibial plateau even during high flexion. Highest moments acted in the frontal plane with a typical peak to peak range ?2.91% BWm (adduction moment) to 1.61% BWm (abduction moment) throughout all activities. Peak flexion/extension moments ranged between ?0.44% BWm (extension moment) and 3.16% BWm (flexion moment). Peak external/internal torques lay between ?1.1% BWm (internal torque) and 0.53% BWm (external torque).The knee joint is highly loaded during daily life. In general, resultant contact forces during dynamic activities were lower than the ones predicted by many mathematical models, but lay in a similar range as measured in vivo by others. Some of the observed load components were much higher than those currently applied when testing knee implants.  相似文献   

14.
The knee is often a site of injury that can often lead to a chronic disease known as osteoarthritis (OA). The disease may be initiated, in part, by acute injuries to joint cartilage and its cells. In a recent study by this laboratory, using Flemish Giant rabbits, an impact compressive load on the tibial femoral joint was shown to cause significant levels of acute damage to chondrocytes in cartilage of the medial and lateral tibial plateaus. In the current study, using the same model, histological and mechanical data from the plateaus were documented at 6 and 12 months post impact, and compared to the unimpacted control limbs and a limb from unimpacted, control animals. The mechanical properties of cartilage were measured with indentation relaxation tests on the medial and lateral plateaus in regions covered and uncovered by the meniscus. The histological studies on impacted limbs showed surface lesions on both plateaus, thickening of the underlying subchondral bone at 12 months and numerous occult microcracks at the calcified cartilage–subchondral bone interface at 6 and 12 months, without significant changes in cartilage thickness or its mechanical properties versus controls. Yet, there was an increase in both the matrix and fiber moduli and a decrease in the permeability of uncovered, medial plateau cartilage in both limbs of impacted animals between 6 and 12 months post impact that was not documented in control animals.  相似文献   

15.
Cadaver models of contact pressure aberration near displaced intra-articular fractures complement clinical experience, but inter-specimen variability often complicates interpretation of in vitro data. A contact finite element formulation is here used to study juxta-articular stress distributions in a plane strain model of tibial plateau step-off incongruity. Attention is focused on the influence of global morphologic parameters: intact joint surface curvatures, cartilage thickness, and cartilage stiffness. The computed stress distributions agreed well with experimental recordings for a typical 3 mm incongruity in an otherwise normal joint. Both decreased cartilage thickness and increased cartilage modulus led to elevations in the peak local contact stress, and to concentration of contact stress near the edge of the step-off incongruity. Similar effects were seen when reduction of global joint congruency was modelled by decreasing the concavity of the tibial plateau. While the observed degree of coupling between global morphology and local stress aberration was by no means negligible, the sensitivity of the stresses to variations in individual parameters was relatively mild. This suggests that the finite element results will be useful for experimental data interpretation.  相似文献   

16.
The menisci are important biomechanical components of the knee. We developed and validated a finite element model of meniscal replacement to assess the effect of surgical fixation technique on contact behavior and knee stability. The geometry of femoral and tibial articular cartilage and menisci was segmented from magnetic resonance images of a normal cadaver knee using MIMICS (Materialise, Leuven, Belgium). A finite element mesh was generated using HyperWorks (Altair Inc, Santa Ana, CA). A finite element solver (Abaqus v6.9, Simulia, Providence, RI) was used to compute contact area and stresses under axial loading and to assess stability (reaction force generated during anteroposterior translation of the femur). The natural and surgical attachments of the meniscal horns and peripheral rim were simulated using springs. After total meniscectomy, femoral contact area decreased by 26% with a concomitant increase in average contact stresses (36%) and peak contact stresses (33%). Replacing the meniscus without suturing the horns did little to restore femoral contact area. Suturing the horns increased contact area and reduced peak contact stresses. Increasing suture stiffness correlated with increased meniscal contact stresses as a greater proportion of tibiofemoral load was transferred to the meniscus. A small incremental benefit was seen of simulated bone plug fixation over the suture construct with the highest stiffness (50 N/mm). Suturing the rim did little to change contact conditions. The nominal anteroposterior stiffness reduced by 3.1 N/mm after meniscectomy. In contrast to contact area and stress, stiffness of the horn fixation sutures had a smaller effect on anteroposterior stability. On the other hand suturing the rim of the meniscus affected anteroposterior stability to a much larger degree. This model emphasizes the importance of the meniscus in knee biomechanics. Appropriate meniscal replacement fixation techniques are likely to be critical to the clinical success of meniscal replacement. While contact conditions are mainly sensitive to meniscus horn fixation, the stability of the knee under anteroposterior shear loads appeared to be more sensitive to meniscal rim fixation. This model may also be useful in predicting the effect of biomaterial mechanical properties and meniscal replacement shape on knee contact conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Abnormal loading of the knee due to injuries or obesity is thought to contribute to the development of osteoarthritis (OA). Small animal models have been used for studying OA progression mechanisms. However, numerical models to study cartilage responses under dynamic loading in preclinical animal models have not been developed. Here we present a musculoskeletal finite element model of a rat knee joint to evaluate cartilage biomechanical responses during a gait cycle. The rat knee joint geometries were obtained from a 3-D MRI dataset and the boundary conditions regarding loading in the joint were extracted from a musculoskeletal model of the rat hindlimb. The fibril-reinforced poroelastic (FRPE) properties of the rat cartilage were derived from data of mechanical indentation tests. Our numerical results showed the relevance of simulating anatomical and locomotion characteristics in the rat knee joint for estimating tissue responses such as contact pressures, stresses, strains, and fluid pressures. We found that the contact pressure and maximum principal strain were virtually constant in the medial compartment whereas they showed the highest values at the beginning of the gait cycle in the lateral compartment. Furthermore, we found that the maximum principal stress increased during the stance phase of gait, with the greatest values at midstance. We anticipate that our approach serves as a first step towards investigating the effects of gait abnormalities on the adaptation and degeneration of rat knee joint tissues and could be used to evaluate biomechanically-driven mechanisms of the progression of OA as a consequence of joint injury or obesity.  相似文献   

18.
Quantifying the complex loads at the patellofemoral joint (PFJ) is vital to understanding the development of PFJ pain and osteoarthritis. Discrete element analysis (DEA) is a computationally efficient method to estimate cartilage contact stresses with potential application at the PFJ to better understand PFJ mechanics. The current study validated a DEA modeling framework driven by PFJ kinematics to predict experimentally-measured PFJ contact stress distributions. Two cadaveric knee specimens underwent quadriceps muscle [215 N] and joint compression [350 N] forces at ten discrete knee positions representing PFJ positions during early gait while measured PFJ kinematics were used to drive specimen-specific DEA models. DEA-computed contact stress and area were compared to experimentally-measured data. There was good agreement between computed and measured mean and peak stress across the specimens and positions (r = 0.63–0.85). DEA-computed mean stress was within an average of 12% (range: 1–47%) of the experimentally-measured mean stress while DEA-computed peak stress was within an average of 22% (range: 1–40%). Stress magnitudes were within the ranges measured (0.17–1.26 MPa computationally vs 0.12–1.13 MPa experimentally). DEA-computed areas overestimated measured areas (average error = 60%; range: 4–117%) with magnitudes ranging from 139 to 307 mm2 computationally vs 74–194 mm2 experimentally. DEA estimates of the ratio of lateral to medial patellofemoral stress distribution predicted the experimental data well (mean error = 15%) with minimal measurement bias. These results indicate that kinematically-driven DEA models can provide good estimates of relative changes in PFJ contact stress.  相似文献   

19.
Injuries to the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and menisci commonly lead to early onset osteoarthritis. Treatments that can restore normative cartilage loading patterns may mitigate the risk of osteoarthritis, though it is unclear whether such a goal is achievable through conservative rehabilitation. We used musculoskeletal simulation to predict cartilage and ligament loading patterns during walking in intact, ACL deficient, menisci deficient, and ACL-menisci deficient knees. Stochastic simulations with varying coordination strategies were then used to test whether neuromuscular control could be modulated to restore normative knee mechanics in the pathologic conditions. During early stance, a 3 mm increase in anterior tibial translation was predicted in the ACL deficient knee. Mean cartilage contact pressure increased by 18% and 24% on the medial and lateral plateaus, respectively, in the menisci deficient knee. Variations in neuromuscular coordination were insufficient to restore normative cartilage contact patterns in either the ACL or menisci deficient knees. Elevated cartilage contact pressures in the pathologic knees were observed in regions where cartilage wear patterns have previously been reported. These results suggest that altered cartilage tissue loading during gait may contribute to region-specific degeneration patterns, and that varying neuromuscular coordination in isolation is unlikely to restore normative knee mechanics.  相似文献   

20.
Restoration of normal patella kinematics is an important clinical outcome of total knee arthroplasty. Failure of the patella within total knee systems has been documented and, upon occurrence, often necessitates revision surgery. It is thus important to understand patella mechanics following implantation, subject to load states that are typically realized during walking and other gaits. Here, a computational model of the patella is developed and used to examine the effects of walking, stair ascent, and stair descent on the development of stress and contact pressure in the patella throughout the gait cycle. Motion of the patella was governed by a combination of kinematic and force control, based on knee flexion and patellofemoral joint reaction force data from the literature. Unlike most previous analyses of full gait, quasi-static equilibrium was enforced throughout the cycle. Results indicate that, though peak forces vary greatly between the three gaits, maximum contact pressure and von Mises stress are roughly equivalent. However, contact area is larger in stair ascent and descent than walking, as patellofemoral loading, implant geometry, and polyethylene yield increase conformity between the femoral component and patella. Additionally, maximum contact pressure does not coincide with maximum load except for the case of walking. Though specific to the implant design considered here, this result has important ramifications for patella testing and emphasizes the need to characterize patella mechanics throughout gait.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号