RESUMO
AIM: To use personalised computed tomography (CT)-based finite element models to quantitatively investigate the likelihood of self-inflicted humeral fracture in non-ambulant infants secondary to rolling. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Three whole-body post-mortem CT examinations of children at the age of rolling (two 4-month-old and one 6-month-old) were used. The mechanical moment needed by each infant to perform a rolling manoeuvre was calculated and applied to the finite element model in order to simulate spontaneous rolling from the prone to the supine position. RESULTS: The maximum predicted strains were found to be substantially lower (with a difference of >80%) than the elastic limit of the bone. CONCLUSION: Results of this study challenge the plausibility of self-inflicted humeral fracture caused by rolling in non-ambulant infants and indicate that it is unlikely for a humeral fracture to result from this mechanism without the assistance of an external force.
Assuntos
Fraturas do Úmero/diagnóstico por imagem , Fraturas do Úmero/etiologia , Atividade Motora , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X/métodos , Cadáver , Maus-Tratos Infantis/diagnóstico , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Feminino , Análise de Elementos Finitos , Humanos , Lactente , Masculino , Fatores de Risco , Gravação em Vídeo , Imagem Corporal TotalRESUMO
Bone finite element (FE) studies based on infant post-mortem computed tomography (CT) examinations are being developed to provide quantitative information to assist the differentiation between accidental and inflicted injury, and unsuspected underlying disease. As the growing skeleton contains non-ossified cartilaginous regions at the epiphyses, which are not well characterised on CT examinations, it is difficult to evaluate the mechanical behaviour of the developing whole bone. This study made use of paired paediatric post mortem femoral CT and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examinations at two different stages of development (4 and 7 months) to provide anatomical and constitutive information for both hard and soft tissues. The work aimed to evaluate the effect of epiphyseal ossification on the propensity to shaft fractures in infants. The outcomes suggest that the failure load of the femoral diaphysis in the models incorporating the non-ossified epiphysis is within the range of bone-only FE models. There may however be an effect on the metaphysis. Confirmation of these findings is required in a larger cohort of children.