Research Article | Volume 4 - Issue 1 | Article DOI :
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Fadi Alkhatib¹, Adeeb Rahman², and Mustafa Mahamid³*
¹Mechanical Engineering Department, Australian College of Kuwait, Kuwait
²Department of Civil Engineering & Mechanics, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee, USA
³Department of Civil & Material Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Corresponding Author:
Mustafa Mahamid, Department of Civil & Material Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago, 842 W. Taylor St., Chicago, IL 60607, USA, Tel: 312-355-0364; Email: mmahamid@uic.edu
Keywords
Femur’s neck; Bone density;
Fall; Bone fracture; Finite element
analysis
Abstract
Elder men and women are at high risk of falling due to loss of coordination, poor vision, or weak bone structure. The fall can result in sustaining immobilizing fracture. The hypothesis examined in this paper is that fracture can be directly related to bone density alteration in the elderly. To assess the risk and provide understanding for working towards fracture preventive measures, an understanding of the magnitude of stresses and strains and their distribution in anatomical geometric locations in the femur are critical.
Finite element software, ANSYS, was used to predict the stress, strains, and fracture possibility in the neck of a 445-mm long femur bone, and 14.5-mm canal diameter due to sideward fall. Different bone densities are studied representing healthy to poor density conditions.
This study serves to answer the hypothesis as to whether bone density loss had a direct adverse correlation to fracture during a fall event in the elderly. Such findings provide potential future preventive measures for designing devises that can be worn by elderly at risk of fracture in a fall event due to poor bone density. This study introduces a first step in answering the question addressing the correlation of fracture and bone density.
Citation
Alkhatib F, Rahman A and Mahamid M. Assessment of Potential Fracture of the Femur’s Nick during Fall for Different Bone Densities. SM J Biomed Eng. 2018; 4(1): 1027.