Journal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials
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J Mech Behav Biomed Mater · Oct 2011
Comparative StudyComparison of four methods to simulate swelling in poroelastic finite element models of intervertebral discs.
Osmotic phenomena influence the intervertebral disc biomechanics. Their simulation is challenging and can be undertaken at different levels of complexity. Four distinct approaches to simulate the osmotic behaviour of the intervertebral disc (a fixed boundary pore pressure model, a fixed osmotic pressure gradient model in the whole disc or only in the nucleus pulposus, and a swelling model with strain-dependent osmotic pressure) were analysed. ⋯ The swelling model offered the best potential to provide more accurate results, conditional upon availability of reliable values for the required coefficients and material properties. Possible fields of application include mechanobiology investigations and crack opening and propagation. However, the other approaches are a good compromise between the ease of implementation and the reliability of results, especially when considering higher loads or when the focus is on global results such as spinal kinematics.
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J Mech Behav Biomed Mater · Jan 2010
Development of biomedical porous titanium filled with medical polymer by in-situ polymerization of monomer solution infiltrated into pores.
Porous metallic materials can have a low Young's modulus, which is approximately equal to that of human bone, by controlling the porosity. On the other hand, certain medical polymers exhibit biofunctionalities that are not intrinsically present in metallic materials. Therefore, a composite consisting of these materials is expected to possess both these advantages for biomedical applications. ⋯ Particularly, the improvement in the tensile strength of pTi pretreated using a silane coupling agent before PMMA filling is greater than that of the non-pretreated pTi because the stress concentration near the pores may be reduced by the improvement in the interfacial adhesiveness between the titanium particles and the PMMA. In contrast, the effect of the PMMA filling on the Young's modulus of pTi is smaller than that on the tensile strength because the Young's modulus of PMMA is considerably lower than that of pTi. Further, tensile strengths and Young's moduli comparable to the tensile strength and Young's modulus of the human bone are successfully obtained in the case of some pTi/PMMA samples.