Title: Applied%20Human%20Anatomy%20and%20Biomechanics
1Applied Human Anatomy and Biomechanics
2Course Content
- Introduction to the Course
- Biomechanical Concepts Related to Human Movement
- Anatomical Concepts Principles Related to the
Analysis of Human Movement - Applications in Human Movement
- Properties of Biological Materials
- Functional Anatomy of Selected Joint Complexes
3Why study?
- Design structures that are safe against the
combined effects of applied forces and moments - Selection of proper material
- Determine safe efficient loading conditions
4Application
- Injury occurs when an imposed load exceeds the
tolerance (load-carrying ability) of a tissue - Training effects
- Drug effects
- Equipment Design effects
5Properties of Biological Materials
- Basic Concepts
- Properties of Selected Biological Materials
- Bone
- Articular Cartilage
- Ligaments Muscle-Tendon Units
6Structural vs. Material Properties
- Material Properties
- Stress-strain relationships of different tissues
- Structural Properties
- Load-deformation relationships of like tissues
7Terminology
- load the sum of all the external forces and
moments acting on the body or system - deformation local changes of shape within a body
8Load-deformation relationship
- Changes in shape (deformation) experienced by a
tissue or structure when it is subjected to
various loads
9Extent of deformation dependent on
- Size and shape (geometry)
- Material
- Structure
- Environmental factors (temperature, humidity)
- Nutrition
- Load application
- Magnitude, direction, and duration of applied
force - Point of application (location)
- Rate of force application
- Frequency of load application
- Variability of magnitude of force
10Types of Loads
- Uniaxial Loads
- Axial
- Compression
- Tension
- Shear
- Multiaxial Loads
- Biaxial loading responses
- Triaxial loading responses
- Bending
- Torsion
11Types of Loads
12Axial Loads
Whiting Zernicke (1998)
13Shear Loads
Whiting Zernicke (1998)
14Axial Loads
Create shear load as well
Whiting Zernicke (1998)
15Biaxial Triaxial Loads
Whiting Zernicke (1998)
16Structural vs. Material Properties
- Structural Properties
- Load-deformation relationships of like tissues
- Material Properties
- Stress-strain relationships of different tissues
17Terminology Stress (?)
- ? F/A (N/m2 or Pa)
- normalized load
- force applied per unit area, where area is
measured in the plane that is perpendicular to
force vector (CSA)
18Terminology Strain (?)
- ? ?dimension/original dimension
- normalized deformation
- change in shape of a tissue relative to its
initial shape
19How are Stress (?) and Strain (?) related?
- Stress is what is done to an object, strain is
how the object responds. - Stress and Strain are proportional to each other.
- Modulus of elasticity stress/strain
20Typical Stress-Strain Curve
21Elastic region Plastic region
22Stiffness
Fig. 3.26a, Whiting Zernicke, 1998
23Stiffness (Elastic Modulus)
24A
B
C
Load (N)
1 5 10 15 20
25
1 2 3 4 5
6 7
Deformation (cm)
25Strength
stiffness ? strength
- Yield
- Ultimate
- Strength
- Failure
26Apparent vs. Actual Strain
1. Ultimate Strength2. Yield Strength3.
Rupture4. Strain hardening region5. Necking
regionA Apparent stress B Actual stress
27Tissue Properties
A
B
C
Load (N)
1 5 10 15 20
25
Deformation (cm)
28Extensibility Elasticity
29Extensibility
A
ligament
tendon
B
C
Load (N)
1 5 10 15 20
25
1 2 3 4 5
6 7
Deformation (cm)
30Rate of Loading
- Bone is stiffer, sustains a higher load to
failure, and stores more energy when it is loaded
with a high strain rate.
31Bulk mechanical properties
- Stiffness
- Strength
- Elasticity
- Ductility
- Brittleness
- Malleability
- Toughness
- Resilience
- Hardness
32Ductility
- Characteristic of a material that undergoes
considerable plastic deformation under tensile
load before rupture - Can you draw???
33Brittleness
- Absence of any plastic deformation prior to
failure - Can you draw???
34Malleability
- Characteristic of a material that undergoes
considerable plastic deformation under
compressive load before rupture - Can you draw???
35Resilience
36Toughness
37Hardness
- Resistance of a material to scratching, wear, or
penetration
38Uniqueness of Biological Materials
- Anisotropic
- Viscoelastic
- Time-dependent behavior
- Organic
- Self-repair
- Adaptation to changes in mechanical demands
39blast produce matrix clast resorb
matrix cyte mature cell
Distinguishes CT from other tissues
40Collagen vs. Elastin
- Elastin
- Great extensibility
- Strain 200
- Lack of creep
- Collagen
- Great tensile strength
- 1 mm2 cross-section ? withstand 980 N tension
- Cross-linked structure ? ? stiffness
- Tensile strain 8-10
- Weak in torsion and bending
41- Bind cells
- Mechanical links
- Resist tensile loads
- Number type of cells
- Proportion of collagen, elastin, ground
substance - Arrangement of protein fibers
42Why study?
- Design structures that are safe against the
combined effects of applied forces and moments - Selection of proper material
- Determine safe efficient loading conditions
43Application
- Injury occurs when an imposed load exceeds the
tolerance (load-carrying ability) of a tissue - Training effects
- Drug effects
- Equipment Design effects
44Properties of Biological Materials
- Basic Concepts
- Properties of Selected Biological Materials
- Bone
- Articular Cartilage
- Ligaments Muscle-Tendon Units
45Mechanical Properties of Bone
- General
- Nonhomogenous
- Anisotropic
- Strongest
- Stiffest
- Tough
- Little elasticity
46Material Properties Bone Tissue
- Cortical Stiffer, stronger, less elastic (2
vs. 50), low energy storage
47Mechanical Properties of Bone
- Ductile vs. Brittle
- Depends on age and rate at which it is loaded
- Younger bone is more ductile
- Bone is more brittle at high speeds
48- Stiffest?
- Strongest?
- Brittle?
- Ductile?
young
old
49Tensile Properties Bone
Stiffness
Ultimate stress (MPa) Modulus of elasticity (GPa) Strain to Fracture ()
Collagen 50 1.2 -
Osteons 38.8-116.6 - -
Axial
Femur (slow) (fast) 78.8-144 6.0-17.6 1.4-4.0
Tibia (slow) 140-174 18.4 1.5
Fibula (slow) 146-165.6 - -
Transverse
Femur (fast) 52 11.5 -
50Compressive Properties Bone
Ultimate stress (MPa) Modulus of elasticity (GPa) Strain to Fracture ()
Osteons 48-93 - -
Axial
Mixed 100-280 - 1-2.4
Femur 170-209 8.7-18.6 1.85
Tibia 213 15.2-35.3 -
Fibula 115 16.6 -
Transverse
Mixed 106-133 4.2 -
78.8-144
1.4-4.0
6.0-17.6
140-174
18.4
146-165.6
51Other Bone
Ultimate stress (MPa) Modulus of elasticity (GPa) Strain to Fracture ()
Shear 50-100 3.58 -
Bending 132-181 10.6-15.8 -
Torsion 54.1 3.2-4.5 0.4-1.2
Tension 78.8-174 6.0-18.4 1.4-4.0
Compression 100-280 8.7-35.3 1-2.4
From LeVeau (1992). Biomechanics of human motion
(3rd ed.). Philadelphia W.B. Saunders.
52Mechanical Properties of Selected Biomaterials
Ultimate stress (MPa) Modulus of elasticity (GPa) Strain to Fracture ()
Polymers (bone cement) 20 2.0 2-4
Ceramic (Alumina) 300 350 lt2
Titanium 900 110 15
Metals (Co-Cr alloy) Cast Forged Stainless steel 600 950 850 220 220 210 8 15 10
Cortical bone 100-150 10-15 1-3
Trabecular bone 8-50 - 2-4
Bones (mixed) 100-280 8.7-35.3 1-2.4
53Viscoelastic Properties Rate Dependency of
Cortical Bone
- ? brittleness
- Energy storage ? 2X (? toughness)
- Rupture strength ? 3X
- Rupture strain ?100
- Stiffness ? 2X
Fig 2-34, Nordin Frankel, (2001)
54Viscoelastic Properties Rate Dependency of
Cortical Bone
- More energy to be absorbed, so fx pattern changes
amt of soft tissue damage ?
Fig 2-34, Nordin Frankel, (2001)
55Effect of Structure
- Larger CSA distributes force over larger area,
- ? stress
- Tubular structure (vs. solid)
- More evenly distributes bending torsional
stresses because the structural material is
distributed away from the central axis - ? bending stiffness without adding large amounts
of bone mass - Narrower middle section (long bones)
- ? bending stresses minimizes chance of fracture
56Effects of Acute Physical Activity
Fig 2-32a, Nordin Frankel (2001)
57Acute Physical Activity
- Tensile strength 140-174 MPa
- Comp strength 213 MPa
- Shear strength 50-100 MPa
Fig 2-32b, Nordin Frankel (2001)
58Acute Physical Activity
- As speed ?, ? and ? ?
- 5X? in ? with speed
- ?walk 0.001/s
- ?slow jog 0.03/s
Fig 2-32b, Nordin Frankel (2001)
59Acute Physical Activity
- In vivo, muscle contraction can exaggerate or
mitigate the effect of external forces
Fig 2-33, Nordin Frankel (2001)
60Chronic Physical Activity
- ? bone density,
- ? compressive strength
- ? stiffness (to a certain threshold)
61Chronic Disuse
- ? bone density (1/wk for bed rest)
- ? strength
- ? stiffness
Fig 2-47, Nordin Frankel (2001)
62Repetitive Physical Activity
Muscle Fatigue
? Ability to Neutralize Stresses on Bone
? Load on Bone
? Tolerance for Repetitions
63Repetitive Physical Activity
Fig 2-38, Nordin Frankel (2001)
64Applications for Bone Injury
- Crack propagation occurs more easily in the
transverse than in the longitudinal direction - Bending
- For adults, failure begins on tension side, since
tension strength lt compression strength - For youth, failure begins on compression side,
since immature bone more ductile - Torsion
- Failure begins in shear, then tension direction
65Effects of Age
- ? brittleness
- ? strength
- (? cancellous bone thickness of cortical bone)
- ? ultimate strain
- ? energy storage
66Effects of Age on Yield Ultimate Stresses
(Tension)
67Effects of Age on Eelastic (Tension)
68Effects of Age on Ultimate Strain (Tension)
69Effects of Age on Energy (Tension)
70Properties of Biological Materials
- Basic Concepts
- Properties of Selected Biological Materials
- Bone
- Articular Cartilage
- Ligaments Muscle-Tendon Units
71- Deforms more than bone since is 20X less stiff
than bone - ? congruency
- High water content causes even distribution of
stress - High elasticity in the direction of joint motion
and where joint pressure is greatest - Compressibility is 50-60
72Tensile Properties Cartilage
Ultimate stress (MPa) Modulus of elasticity (GPa) Strain to Fracture ()
Tension 4.41 - 10-100
Superficial 10-40 0.15-0.5 -
Deep 0-30 0-0.2 -
Costal 44 - 25.9
Disc 2.7 - -
Annulus 15.68 - -
73Compressive Properties Cartilage
Ultimate stress (MPa) Modulus of elasticity (GPa) Strain to Fracture ()
Compression 7-23 0.012-0.047 3-17
Patella - 0.00228 -
Femoral head - 0.0084-0.0153 -
Costal - - 15.0
Disc 11 - -
74Other Loading Properties Cartilage
Ultimate stress(MPa) Modulus of elasticity (GPa) Strain to Fracture ()
Shear
Normal - 0.00557-0.01022 -
Degenerated - 0.00137-0.00933 -
Torsion
Femoral - 0.01163 -
Disc 4.5-5.1 - -
Tension
From LeVeau (1992). Biomechanics of human motion
(3rd ed.). Philadelphia W.B. Saunders.
75Properties of Biological Materials
- Basic Concepts
- Properties of Selected Biological Materials
- Bone
- Articular Cartilage
- Ligaments Muscle-Tendon Units
- Skeletal Muscle
76Structure and Function Architecture
- The arrangement of collagen fibers differs
between ligaments and tendons. What is the
functional significance?
77Biomechanical Properties and Behavior
- Tendons withstand unidirectional loads
- Ligaments resist tensile stress in one
direction and smaller stresses in other
directions.
78Viscoelastic Properties Rate Dependent Behavior
- Moderate strain-rate sensitivity
- With ? loading rate
- Energy storage ? (? toughness)
- Rupture strength ?
- Rupture strain ?
- Stiffness ?
79Viscoelastic Properties Repetitive Loading
Effects
Enoka (2002), Figure 5.3, p. 219, From Butler et
al. (1978)
80Idealized Stress-Strain for Collagenous Tissue
Very small plastic region
Enoka (2002), Figure 5.3, p. 219, From Butler et
al. (1978)
81Ligamentum flavum
Nordin Frankel (2001), Figure 4-10, p. 110,
From Nachemson Evans (1968)
82Tensile Properties Ligaments
Ultimate stress (MPa) Modulus of elasticity (GPa) Strain to Fracture ()
Nonelastic 60-100 0.111 5-14
ACL 37.8 - 23-35.8
Anterior Longitudinal .0123
Collagen 50 1.2 -
83Viscoelastic Behavior of Bone-Ligament-Bone
Complex
- Fast loading rate
- Ligament weakest
- Slow loading rate
- Bony insertion of ligament weakest
- Load to failure ? 20
- Energy storage ? 30
- Stiffness similar
As loading rate ?, bone strength ? more than
ligament strength.
84Ligament-capsule injuries
- Sprains
- 1st degree 25 tissue failure no clinical
instability - 2nd degree 50 tissue failure 50? in strength
stiffness - 3rd degree 75 tissue failure easily
detectable instabilty - Bony avulsion failure (young people more likely
if tensile load applied slowly)
85Tensile Properties Muscles Tendons
Ultimate stress (MPa) Modulus of elasticity (GPa) Strain to Fracture ()
Muscle 0.147-3.50 - 58-65
Fascia 15 - -
Tendon
Various 45-125 0.8-2.0 8-10
Various 50-150 - 9.4-9.9
Various 19.1-88.5 - -
Mammalian 0.8-2
Achilles 34-55 - -
86Enoka (2002), Figure 5.12, p. 227, From Noyes
(1977) Noyes et al. (1984)
87EDL Tendon
Enoka (2002), Figure 3.9, p. 134, From Schechtman
Bader (1997)
88 ECRB Achilles
Max muscle force (N) 58.00 5000.0
Tendon length (mm) 204.00 350.0
Tendon thickness (mm2) 14.60 65.0
Elastic modulus (MPa) 726.00 1500.0
Stress (MPa) 4.06 76.9
Strain () 2.70 5.0
Stiffness (N/cm) 105.00 2875.0
89Muscle-Tendon Interaction
- Stiffer tendon ? more brisk, accurate movements
- Less stiff, ? muscle contraction velocity, ?
efficiency - ? tendon compliance, small ? muscle length (as
compared to ? M-T unit length - High resilience
- Limited viscoelastic behavior, therefore, tendon
in major site of storage of elastic energy in M-T
unit - Tensile strength of tendon 2X that of its muscle
90Role of Elasticity in Human Movement
- Elasticity of tendon
- responsible for force transfer from muscle to
bone - enables storage and release of energy, reducing
metabolic cost - Material structural properties of tendon
determine the amount of resistance to stretch
and, thus, amount of elastic force transferred to
bone
91Muscle Mechanical Stiffness
- Instantaneous rate of change of force with length
- Unstimulated muscles are very compliant
- Stiffness increases with tension
- High rates of change of force have high muscle
stiffness, particularly during eccentric actions - Stiffness controlled by stretch and tendon
reflexes
92Effects of Disuse
Nordin Frankel (2001), Figure 4-15a, p. 110,
From Noyes (1977)
93Effects of Disuse
Nordin Frankel (2001), Figure 4-15b, p. 110,
From Noyes (1977)
94Effects of corticosteroids
- ? stiffness
- ? rupture strength
- ? energy absorption
- Time dosage dependent
95Effect of Structure
Whiting Zernicke (1998), Figure 4.8a,b, p. 104,
From Butler et al. (1978).
96Miscellaneous Effects
- Age effects
- More compliant / less strong before maturity
- Insertion site becomes weak link in middle age
- ? stiffness strength in pregnancy in rabbits
- Hormonal?
97Summary
- Mechanical properties of biological materials
vary across tissues and structures due to
material and geometry differences. - Understanding how age, physical activity,
nutrition, and disease alter mechanical
properties enables us to design appropriate
interventions and rehabilitations. - Understanding these mechanical properties allows
us to design appropriate prosthetic devices to
for joint replacement and repair.