Rotator cuff tears are a common problem in patients over the age of 50 yr. Tear propagation is a potential contributing factor to the failure of physical therapy for treating rotator cuff tears, thus requiring surgical intervention. However, the evolution of tears within the rotator cuff is not well understood yet. The objective of this study is to establish a computational model to quantify initiation of tear propagation in the supraspinatus tendon and examine the effect of tear size and location. A 3D finite element (FE) model of the supraspinatus tendon was constructed from images of a healthy cadaveric tendon. A tear of varying length was placed at six different locations within the tendon. A fiber-reinforced Mooney–Rivlin material model with spatial variation in material properties along the anterior–posterior (AP) axis was utilized to obtain the stress state of the computational model under uniaxial stretch. Material parameters were calibrated by comparing computational and experimental stress–strain response and used to validate the computational model. The stress state of the computational model was contrasted against the spatially varying material strength to predict the critical applied stretch at which a tear starts propagating further. It was found that maximum principal stress (as well as the strain) was localized at the tips of the tear. The computed critical stretch was significantly lower for the posterior tip of the tear than for the anterior tip suggesting a propensity to propagate posteriorly. Onset of tear propagation was strongly correlated with local material strength and stiffness in the vicinity of the tear tip. Further, presence of a stress-shielded zone along the edges of the tear was observed. This study illustrates the complex interplay between geometry and material properties of tendon up to the initiation of tear propagation. Future work will examine the evolution of tears during the propagation process as well as under more complex loading scenarios.
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August 2015
Research-Article
The Effect of Size and Location of Tears in the Supraspinatus Tendon on Potential Tear Propagation
James Thunes,
James Thunes
Department of Bioengineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
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R. Matthew Miller,
R. Matthew Miller
Department of Bioengineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Orthopaedic Robotics Laboratory,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
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Siladitya Pal,
Siladitya Pal
Department of Mechanical and
Industrial Engineering,
Industrial Engineering,
Indian Institute of Technology
,Roorkee 247667
, India
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Sameer Damle,
Sameer Damle
Department of Chemical Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
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Richard E. Debski,
Richard E. Debski
Department of Bioengineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Orthopaedic Robotics Laboratory,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Department of Orthopedic Surgery,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
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Spandan Maiti
Spandan Maiti
1
Department of Bioengineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Department of Chemical Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
e-mail: spm54@pitt.edu
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
e-mail: spm54@pitt.edu
1Corresponding author.
Search for other works by this author on:
James Thunes
Department of Bioengineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
R. Matthew Miller
Department of Bioengineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Orthopaedic Robotics Laboratory,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Siladitya Pal
Department of Mechanical and
Industrial Engineering,
Industrial Engineering,
Indian Institute of Technology
,Roorkee 247667
, India
Sameer Damle
Department of Chemical Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Richard E. Debski
Department of Bioengineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Orthopaedic Robotics Laboratory,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Department of Orthopedic Surgery,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Spandan Maiti
Department of Bioengineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Department of Chemical Engineering,
Swanson School of Engineering,
e-mail: spm54@pitt.edu
Swanson School of Engineering,
University of Pittsburgh
,Pittsburgh, PA 15260
e-mail: spm54@pitt.edu
1Corresponding author.
Manuscript received December 24, 2014; final manuscript received May 26, 2015; published online June 23, 2015. Assoc. Editor: Kristen Billiar.
J Biomech Eng. Aug 2015, 137(8): 081012 (8 pages)
Published Online: August 1, 2015
Article history
Received:
December 24, 2014
Revision Received:
May 26, 2015
Online:
June 23, 2015
Citation
Thunes, J., Matthew Miller, R., Pal, S., Damle, S., Debski, R. E., and Maiti, S. (August 1, 2015). "The Effect of Size and Location of Tears in the Supraspinatus Tendon on Potential Tear Propagation." ASME. J Biomech Eng. August 2015; 137(8): 081012. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4030745
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