How Can Biomechanical Multibody Models of Scoliosis Be Accurate in Simulating Spine Movement Behavior While Neglecting the Changes of Spinal Length?

Author:

Jalalian Athena1,Arastehfar Soheil1,Gibson Ian2,Tay Francis E. H.3,Liu Gabriel4

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Engineering Technology, University of Twente, P.O. BOX 217, Enschede 7500 AE, The Netherlands

2. Faculty of Engineering Technology, University of Twente, P.O. BOX 217, Enschede, 7500 AE The Netherlands

3. Faculty of Engineering, National University of Singapore, 21 Lower Kent Ridge Road, Singapore 119077, Singapore

4. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, National University Hospital, 5 Lower Kent Ridge Road, Singapore 119074, Singapore

Abstract

Abstract This paper studies how biomechanical multibody models of scoliosis can neglect the changes of spinal length and yet be accurate in reconstructing spinal columns. As these models with fixed length comprise rigid links interconnected by rotary joints, they resemble polygonal chains that approximate spine curves with a finite number of line segments. In mathematics, using more segments with shorter lengths can result in more accurate curve approximations. This raises the question of whether more accurate spine curve approximations by increasing the number of links/joints can yield more accurate spinal column reconstructions. For this, the accuracy of spine curve approximation was improved consistently by increasing the number of links/joints, and its effects on the accuracy of spinal column reconstruction were assessed. Positive correlation was found between the accuracy of spine reconstruction and curve approximation. It was shown that while increasing the accuracy of curve approximations, the representation of scoliosis concavity and its side-to-side deviations were improved. Moreover, reconstruction errors of the spine regions separated by the inflection vertebrae had minimal impacts on each other. Overall, multibody scoliosis models with fixed spinal lengths can benefit from the extra rotational joints that contribute toward the accuracy of spine curve approximation. The outcome of this study leads to concurrent accuracy improvement and simplification of multibody models; joint-link configurations can be independently defined for the regions separated by the inflection vertebrae, enabling local optimization of the models for higher accuracy without unnecessary added complexity to the whole model.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

Reference24 articles.

1. Curve Progression in Idiopathic Scoliosis: Follow-Up Study to Skeletal Maturity;Spine,2009

2. Biomechanical Simulations of Scoliotic Spine Correction Due to Prone Position and Anaesthesia Prior to Surgical Instrumentation;Clin. Biomech.,2005

3. Preoperative Planning Simulator for Spinal Deformity Surgeries;Spine,2008

4. Jalalian, A., 2016, “ A Patient-Specific Multibody Model of Scoliotic Spine for Surgical Correction Prediction in the Coronal Plane,” Ph.D. dissertation, Department Mechanical Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore.http://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/134449

5. A Patient-Specific Multibody Kinematic Model for Representation of the Scoliotic Spine Movement in Frontal Plane of the Human Body;Multibody Syst. Dyn.,2017

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