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Automated Hexahedral Mesh Generation from Biomedical Image Data:Applications in Limb Prosthetics
Zachariah, Santosh G., Joan E. Sanders and George M. Turkiyyah
IEEE Transactions on Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE, Vol 4, Num 2, pp.91-102, June 1996
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MESHING RESEARCH CORNER
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Center for Bioengineering and Department of Civil Engineering. University of
Washington. Seattle, WA USA.
Abstract
A general method to generate hexahedral meshes for finite element analysis of
residual limbs and similar biomedical geometries is presented. The method
utilizes skeleton-based subdivision of cross-sectional domains to produce simple
subdomains in which structured meshes are easily generated. Application to a
below-knee residual limb and external prosthetic socket is described. The
residual limb was modeled as consisting of bones, soft tissue, and skin. The
prosthetic socket model comprised a socket wall with an inner liner. The
geometries of these structures were defined using axial cross-sectional contour
data from X-ray computed tomography, optical scanning, and mechanical surface
digitization. A tubular surface representation, using B-splines to define the
directrix and generator, is shown to be convenient for definition of the
structure geometries. Conversion of cross-sectional data to the compact tubular
surface representation is direct, and the analytical representation simplifies
geometric querying and numerical optimization within the mesh generation
algorithms. The element meshes remain geometrically accurate since boundary
nodes are constrained to lie on the tubular surfaces. Several element meshes of
increasing mesh density were generated for two residual limbs and prosthetic
sockets. Convergence testing demonstrated that approximately 19 elements are
required along a circumference of the residual limb surface for a simple linear
elastic model. A model with the fibula absent compared with the same geometry
with the fibula present showed differences suggesting higher distal stresses in
the absence of the fibula. Automated hexahedral mesh generation algorithms for
sliced data represent an advancement in prosthetic stress analysis since they
allow rapid modeling of any given residual limb and optimization of mesh
parameters.
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