Title of article :
biomechanical evaluation of bone quality effect on stresses at bone-implant interface: a finite element study
Author/Authors :
taharou, b. university of mascara - faculty of science technology, mascara, algeria , merdji, a. university of mascara - faculty of science technology, mascara, algeria , merdji, a. university of sidi bel-abbes - faculty of technology - laboratory of mechanics physical of material (lmpm), algeria , hillstrom, r. new york university - tandon school of engineering - department of bioengineering, usa , benaissa, a. university of mascara - faculty of science technology, mascara, algeria , roy, s. srm institute of science and technology - department of mechanical engineering, chennai, india , della, n. university of mascara - faculty of science technology, mascara, algeria , aid, a. university of mascara - faculty of science technology, mascara, algeria , mukdadi, o.m. west virginia university - department of mechanical and aerospace engineering, morgantown, usa
From page :
1266
To page :
1275
Abstract :
the aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of the alveolar bone quality on von mises stress at the bone-implant interface during occlusal loading. four (3d) finite element models of fully osteointegrated 3-mm diameter × 11.5-mm length dental implant indifferent alveolar bone with different cortical bone thickness are created, using solidworks computer aided design software. the alveolar bone cortical-spongy bone ratio modelled includes i) 90%-10%, ii) 60%-40%, iii) 40%-60%, and iv) 10%-90%. these models are then exported to abaqus software and stress analyses are run under an occlusal load of 70 n acting on the platform face of the dental implant. results of this study show that the implants are subjected to similar stress distributions in all models; maximum stress values are confined in the outer cervical plate of the cortical bone around the neck. this could explain bone loss and implant de-osseointegration. peak stresses are lowest in the model with 90% cortical bone (14.2 mpa) and almost doubled in the model with 10% cortical bone (26.6 mpa). the stress values gradually reduce towards the apical area, demonstrating masticatory force transfer from implant to bone. furthermore, both cortical and spongy bone structures exhibit highest stress values in the model with thinnest cortical layer. the high interfacial stress concentration near the implantcortical bone junction could lead to bone failure or implant instability induced by fatigue or overload risk. results of our study could be a first step towards the development of a clinical pre-operative planning tool for dental implantolgy.
Keywords :
bone quality , dental implant , 3d finite , element analysis , stress
Journal title :
Journal of Applied and Computational Mechanics
Journal title :
Journal of Applied and Computational Mechanics
Record number :
2652910
Link To Document :
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