Validation of a parametric finite element human femur model

Traffic Inj Prev. 2017 May 19;18(4):420-426. doi: 10.1080/15389588.2016.1269172. Epub 2017 Jan 17.

Abstract

Objective: Finite element (FE) models with geometry and material properties that are parametric with subject descriptors, such as age and body shape/size, are being developed to incorporate population variability into crash simulations. However, the validation methods currently being used with these parametric models do not assess whether model predictions are reasonable in the space over which the model is intended to be used. This study presents a parametric model of the femur and applies a unique validation paradigm to this parametric femur model that characterizes whether model predictions reproduce experimentally observed trends.

Methods: FE models of male and female femurs with geometries that are parametric with age, femur length, and body mass index (BMI) were developed based on existing statistical models that predict femur geometry. These parametric FE femur models were validated by comparing responses from combined loading tests of femoral shafts to simulation results from FE models of the corresponding femoral shafts whose geometry was predicted using the associated age, femur length, and BMI. The effects of subject variables on model responses were also compared with trends in the experimental data set by fitting similarly parameterized statistical models to both the results of the experimental data and the corresponding FE model results and then comparing fitted model coefficients for the experimental and predicted data sets.

Results: The average error in impact force at experimental failure for the parametric models was 5%. The coefficients of a statistical model fit to simulation data were within one standard error of the coefficients of a similarly parameterized model of the experimental data except for the age parameter, likely because material properties used in simulations were not varied with specimen age. In simulations to explore the effects of femur length, BMI, and age on impact response, only BMI significantly affected response for both men and women, with increasing BMI producing higher impact forces.

Conclusions: Impactor forces from simulations, on average, matched experimental values at the time of failure. In addition, the simulations were able to match the trends in the experimental data set.

Keywords: Lower extremity injury; Total Human Model for Safety (THUMS); motor vehicle crashes.

Publication types

  • Validation Study

MeSH terms

  • Accidents, Traffic / prevention & control
  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Biomechanical Phenomena
  • Female
  • Femoral Neck Fractures / physiopathology*
  • Femur / anatomy & histology*
  • Femur / physiology
  • Finite Element Analysis
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Models, Anatomic*
  • Safety*
  • Wounds and Injuries / pathology
  • Young Adult