Abstract/Details

Investigation of Spine Loading to Understand Vertebral Fractures

Bruno, Alexander G.   Massachusetts Institute of Technology ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  2015. 0830816.

Abstract (summary)

Vertebral fractures are the most common complication of osteoporosis and are associated with significant pain, height loss, disfigurement, respiratory impairment, depression, and decreased life span. Despite the high personal and societal costs of vertebral fractures, little is known regarding their biomechanical etiology. In particular, whereas much is known about the determinants of vertebral strength, little is known about the in vivo loading of the spine that may contribute to vertebral fracture. Prior efforts to understand the possible contribution of spine mechanics to vertebral fractures have been limited by the inability to accurately assess in vivo spinal loading, especially in the thoracic region. Thus, the overall goal of this work was to improve the understanding of vertebral fractures through detailed analysis of spinal loading.

We first developed and validated a novel musculoskeletal model capable of predicting forces in the thoracolumbar spine during daily activities. Model-derived predictions of vertebral compressive loading and trunk muscle activity were highly correlated with previously collected in vivo measurements of intradiscal pressure, vertebral compression from telemeterized implants, and trunk muscle myoelectric activity from electromyography. To gain insights into how individual variation in trunk anatomy influences vertebral loading, we developed a robust set of methods for rapid, automated generation of subject specific musculoskeletal models of the thoracolumbar spine using computed tomography based measurements of spine curvature and trunk muscle morphology. Using these subject specific models, we found that normal variations in spine curvature and muscle morphology in the adult population have a large effect on vertebral loading predictions. Specifically, we found that increasing thoracic kyphosis and reducing lumbar lordosis, changes that commonly occur with age, were both associated with higher spinal loads. Lastly, we used our musculoskeletal model to describe how vertebral loading and the factor-of-risk (load-to-strength ratio) vary along the spine for a large number of activities. For a majority of activities, the highest loads and factor-of-risk were in the thoracolumbar region, which is the spine region with the highest incidence of vertebral fracture. Further, we identified a unique biomechanical mechanism responsible for the high loads in this region. (Copies available exclusively from MIT Libraries, libraries.mit.edu/docs - [email protected])

Indexing (details)


Subject
Biomedical engineering;
Health sciences;
Biomechanics
Classification
0541: Biomedical engineering
0566: Health sciences
0648: Biomechanics
Identifier / keyword
Biological sciences; Applied sciences; Health and environmental sciences
Title
Investigation of Spine Loading to Understand Vertebral Fractures
Author
Bruno, Alexander G.
Number of pages
0
Degree date
2015
School code
0753
Source
DAI-B 76/12(E), Dissertation Abstracts International
Place of publication
Ann Arbor
Country of publication
United States
Advisor
Bouxsein, Mary L.
University/institution
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
University location
United States -- Massachusetts
Degree
Ph.D.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
0830816
ProQuest document ID
1712393602
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1712393602