Abstract
It is often not possible to machine human or animal tissue, such as bone, in a typical engineering workshop due to the numerous health risks associated. Further to this, currently used synthetic substitutes are also unsuitable for machining. This is mainly due to the aerosolization of harmful particles created during the machining process. It is however essential to thoroughly test and evaluate emerging orthopedic cutting tool designs, particularly when considering that osteonecrosis occurs at as low as 47 °C cutting temperature. It is proposed here that a composite bone model can be constructed using a dense hardwood to represent the hard cortical bone outer shell, and a less dense softwood to represent the spongy cancellous bone interior.
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Can Wood be used as a Bio-mechanical Substitute for Bone during Evaluation of Surgical Machining Tools?
Andrew Naylor
It is often not possible to machine human or animal tissue, such as bone, in a typical engineering workshop due to the numerous health risks associated. Further to this, currently used synthetic substitutes are also unsuitable for machining. This is mainly due to the aerosolization of harmful particles created during the machining process. It is however essential to thoroughly test and evaluate emerging orthopedic cutting tool designs, particularly when considering that osteonecrosis occurs at as low as 47 °C cutting temperature. It is proposed here that a composite bone model can be constructed using a dense hardwood to represent the hard cortical bone outer shell, and a less dense softwood to represent the spongy cancellous bone interior.
Keywords: Cortical bone; Cancellous bone; Polyurethane foam; Glass fiber reinforced epoxy
Contact information: School of Mechanical and Systems Engineering, Stephenson Building, Claremont Road, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU, United Kingdom; andrew.naylor@ncl.ac.uk
Background
Like wood, bone is a heterogeneous anisotropic material. It consists of a hard, dense outer layer known as cortical bone with a soft, spongy interior known as cancellous bone. The cortical bone outer layer is composed of osteons, the longitudinal building blocks that provide bone its great strength and rigidity. Cancellous bone, on the other hand, is less dense and is composed of porous osseous tissue.
Due to the health risks associated with human and animal tissue, it is rarely permitted to machine bone in a typical workshop. It is however vital that engineers can evaluate the suitability of the cutting tools before they are approved for use by surgeons. It is of particular importance that the temperature induced during cutting does not exceed 47 °C, the threshold temperature for osteonecrosis (death of bone tissue) (Eriksson et al. 1984). To address these issues, biomechanical test blocks are often used to simulate bone. These test blocks can be separated into two typical categories: 1) Sold polyurethane foam of varying density used to simulate both cortical and cancellous bone (Patel et al. 2008); 2) Glass fiber reinforced epoxy (GFRE) used to simulate cortical bone only (Chong et al. 2007). Both of these materials have their limitations. The former is homogenous and hence does not reflect the longitudinal grain structure of cortical bone; it is not advisable to machine the latter in a typical workshop, as this aerosolizes the glass fiber particles, introducing the risk of respiratory inflammation to anyone within close proximity.
Comparison of Properties
The properties of polyurethane foam are poorly matched to those of bone, with the exception of thermal conductivity for high-density cancellous bone (Table 1). The properties of glass fiber reinforced epoxy are in fact very well aligned to those of cortical bone, both along and across the grain. This makes it the ideal material for mechanical tests, yet machinability is still problematic due to the aerosolization of glass fiber particles.
When focusing on wood (Table 2) it is evident that the properties of the higher density, hardwood species (oak and Lignum vitae) are well aligned with cortical bone. The properties of the softwood species (pine and spruce), obtained through testing across the grain only, are more comparable to cancellous bone. It is therefore possible to construct a bio-mechanical test block using a thin layer of hardwood cemented to a thicker layer of softwood. In this instance, the wood grain direction of the hardwood layer should be oriented longitudinally to mimic the osteons present in cortical bone. The grain direction of the softwood layer should be perpendicular to that of hardwood to account for the disparity in properties along and across the grain, as properties taken across the grain only are comparable to high density cancellous bone.
Table 1. Properties of Bone and Biomechanical Test Substitutes
Table 2. Properties of Selected Woods
Proposed Further Developments
The proposed wooden bio-mechanical test block is certainly a more promising option than using polyurethane foam to simulate bone. Properties are much closer aligned, and like bone, wood is a heterogeneous anisotropic material. The proposed test block, however, would not be able to match the properties of bone as well as Glass fiber reinforced epoxy. It can however be machined with much fewer associated health risks. To summarize, the proposed test block can provide a much safer, inexpensive solution to machining bone in a typical workshop environment. It is the intention of the author to validate this hypothesis through a program of controlled cutting tests.
REFERENCES CITED
Chong, A. C. M., Miller, F., Buxton, M., and Friis, E. A. (2007). “Fracture toughness and fatigue crack propagation rate of short fiber reinforced epoxy composites for analogue cortical bone,” Journal of Biomechanical Engineering 129(4), 487-493. DOI: 10.1115/1.2746369
Eriksson, R. A., Albrektsson, T., and Magnusson, B. (1984). “Assessment of bone viability after heat trauma: A histological, histochemical and vital microscopic study in the rabbit,” Scandinavian Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and Hand Surgery, 18(3), 261-268. DOI: 10.3109/02844318409052849
Patel, P. S. D., Shepherd, D. E. T., and Hukins, D. W. L. (2008). “Compressive properties of commercially available polyurethane foams as mechanical models for osteoporotic human cancellous bone,” BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders 9(1), 137. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-9-137