Quantifying the Effects of Formalin Fixation on the Mechanical Properties of Cortical Bone Using Beam Theory and Optimization Methodology With Specimen-Specific Finite Element Models

Author:

Zhang Guan-Jun1,Yang Jie1,Guan Feng-Jiao2,Chen Dan3,Li Na4,Cao Libo1,Mao Haojie5

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Advanced Design and Manufacturing for Vehicle Body, Hunan University, 1st Lushan South Street, Changsha 410082, China

2. College of Mechatronic Engineering and Automation, National University of Defense Technology, 109 Deya Road, Changsha 410073, China

3. Department of Human Anatomy and Neurobiology, School of Basic Medical Science, Central South University, 172nd Tongzipo Road, Changsha 410013, China

4. Radiology Department, Xiangya 3rd Hospital, Central South University, 138 Tongzipo Road, Changsha 410013, China

5. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Bioengineering Center, Wayne State University, 818 W. Hancock, Detroit, MI 48201 e-mail:

Abstract

The effects of formalin fixation on bone material properties remain debatable. In this study, we collected 36 fresh-frozen cuboid-shaped cortical specimens from five male bovine femurs and immersed half of the specimens into 4% formalin fixation liquid for 30 days. We then conducted three-point bending tests and used both beam theory method and an optimization method combined with specimen-specific finite element (FE) models to identify material parameters. Through the optimization FE method, the formalin-fixed bones showed a significantly lower Young's modulus (−12%) compared to the fresh-frozen specimens, while no difference was observed using the beam theory method. Meanwhile, both the optimization FE and beam theory methods revealed higher effective failure strains for formalin-fixed bones compared to fresh-frozen ones (52% higher through the optimization FE method and 84% higher through the beam theory method). Hence, we conclude that the formalin fixation has a significant effect on bovine cortical bones at small, elastic, as well as large, plastic deformations.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

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