The incidence of vertebral fragility fracture is increased by the presence of preexisting pathologies such as metastatic disease. Computational tools could support the fracture prediction and consequently the decision of the best medical treatment. Anyway, validation is required to use these tools in clinical practice. To address this necessity, in this study subject-specific homogenized finite element models of single vertebrae were generated from micro CT images for both healthy and metastatic vertebrae and validated against experimental data. More in detail, spine segments were tested under compression and imaged with micro CT. The displacements field could be extracted for each vertebra singularly using the digital volume correlation full-field technique. Homogenized finite element models of each vertebra could hence be built from the micro CT images, applying boundary conditions consistent with the experimental displacements at the endplates. Numerical and experimental displacements and strains fields were eventually compared. In addition, the outcomes of a micro CT based homogenized model were compared to the ones of a clinical-CT based model. Good agreement between experimental and computational displacement fields, both for healthy and metastatic vertebrae, was found. Comparison between micro CT based and clinical-CT based outcomes showed strong correlations. Furthermore, models were able to qualitatively identify the regions which experimentally showed the highest strain concentration. In conclusion, the combination of experimental full-field technique and the in-silico modelling allowed the development of a promising pipeline for validation of fracture risk predictors, although further improvements in both fields are needed to better analyse quantitatively the post-yield behaviour of the vertebra.
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