Assessing the accuracy of using biplanar radiography combined with computed tomography to estimate cartilage deformation in the hip

Excessive or abnormal joint loading that leads to cartilage degeneration has been associated with hip osteoarthritis (OA). Before preventative measures for OA can be designed, such as physiotherapy techniques, braces, or surgical interventions, the connection between load-bearing and cartilage degen...

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Main Author: Wilson, Katharine Joan
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/37664
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-376642018-01-05T17:25:18Z Assessing the accuracy of using biplanar radiography combined with computed tomography to estimate cartilage deformation in the hip Wilson, Katharine Joan Excessive or abnormal joint loading that leads to cartilage degeneration has been associated with hip osteoarthritis (OA). Before preventative measures for OA can be designed, such as physiotherapy techniques, braces, or surgical interventions, the connection between load-bearing and cartilage degeneration needs to be validated experimentally. As a first step towards such a validation, a method of measuring the load distribution across the hip joint is needed; ideally that can be used in vivo and can detect changes in the load distribution during an applied load. The objective of this study was to assess the accuracy of using biplanar radiography combined with CT imaging to estimate hip cartilage strain across the joint as an indication of the load distribution. Estimating cartilage strain using biplanar radiography and CT imaging is a multi-device multi-step measurement protocol that has error associated with each step. While biplanar radiography systems are commonly assessed on their ability to measure radio-opaque bead locations, to the author’s knowledge no studies have quantified errors in the additional steps of estimating cartilage strain. The present study used a phantom hip joint to quantify the errors in measuring bone displacement with biplanar radiography, segmenting 3D joint surfaces from a CT image, and measuring the relative proximity of joint surfaces in the biplanar radiography coordinate frame. The quantified errors were much lower than ex vivo hip cartilage deformation results in the literature, which demonstrated the potential for using this technique to estimate cartilage strain in the hip. As a proof of concept, cartilage strain was estimated in the ex vivo hip joint during a compressive load. Two hemi-pelvis/proximal femur specimens, with radio-opaque beads inserted in each bone, were loaded in compression in a materials testing machine, with biplanar radiographs acquired throughout. A small amount of cartilage deformation (0.1mm) was detected across the hip joint; however, due to the low load applied the deformation results were not comparable to the literature. The largest cartilage strains were identified in the anterior and superior regions, which was consistent with the literature. Future studies using higher loads are needed to further assess the capabilities of our system. Applied Science, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Department of Graduate 2011-09-27T23:54:45Z 2011-09-27T23:54:45Z 2011 2011-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/37664 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Excessive or abnormal joint loading that leads to cartilage degeneration has been associated with hip osteoarthritis (OA). Before preventative measures for OA can be designed, such as physiotherapy techniques, braces, or surgical interventions, the connection between load-bearing and cartilage degeneration needs to be validated experimentally. As a first step towards such a validation, a method of measuring the load distribution across the hip joint is needed; ideally that can be used in vivo and can detect changes in the load distribution during an applied load. The objective of this study was to assess the accuracy of using biplanar radiography combined with CT imaging to estimate hip cartilage strain across the joint as an indication of the load distribution. Estimating cartilage strain using biplanar radiography and CT imaging is a multi-device multi-step measurement protocol that has error associated with each step. While biplanar radiography systems are commonly assessed on their ability to measure radio-opaque bead locations, to the author’s knowledge no studies have quantified errors in the additional steps of estimating cartilage strain. The present study used a phantom hip joint to quantify the errors in measuring bone displacement with biplanar radiography, segmenting 3D joint surfaces from a CT image, and measuring the relative proximity of joint surfaces in the biplanar radiography coordinate frame. The quantified errors were much lower than ex vivo hip cartilage deformation results in the literature, which demonstrated the potential for using this technique to estimate cartilage strain in the hip. As a proof of concept, cartilage strain was estimated in the ex vivo hip joint during a compressive load. Two hemi-pelvis/proximal femur specimens, with radio-opaque beads inserted in each bone, were loaded in compression in a materials testing machine, with biplanar radiographs acquired throughout. A small amount of cartilage deformation (0.1mm) was detected across the hip joint; however, due to the low load applied the deformation results were not comparable to the literature. The largest cartilage strains were identified in the anterior and superior regions, which was consistent with the literature. Future studies using higher loads are needed to further assess the capabilities of our system. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Mechanical Engineering, Department of === Graduate
author Wilson, Katharine Joan
spellingShingle Wilson, Katharine Joan
Assessing the accuracy of using biplanar radiography combined with computed tomography to estimate cartilage deformation in the hip
author_facet Wilson, Katharine Joan
author_sort Wilson, Katharine Joan
title Assessing the accuracy of using biplanar radiography combined with computed tomography to estimate cartilage deformation in the hip
title_short Assessing the accuracy of using biplanar radiography combined with computed tomography to estimate cartilage deformation in the hip
title_full Assessing the accuracy of using biplanar radiography combined with computed tomography to estimate cartilage deformation in the hip
title_fullStr Assessing the accuracy of using biplanar radiography combined with computed tomography to estimate cartilage deformation in the hip
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the accuracy of using biplanar radiography combined with computed tomography to estimate cartilage deformation in the hip
title_sort assessing the accuracy of using biplanar radiography combined with computed tomography to estimate cartilage deformation in the hip
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/37664
work_keys_str_mv AT wilsonkatharinejoan assessingtheaccuracyofusingbiplanarradiographycombinedwithcomputedtomographytoestimatecartilagedeformationinthehip
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