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. 2019 Feb;120(1):16-20.
doi: 10.1016/j.jormas.2018.09.002. Epub 2018 Oct 1.

Development and validation of an optimized finite element model of the human orbit

Affiliations

Development and validation of an optimized finite element model of the human orbit

J M Foletti et al. J Stomatol Oral Maxillofac Surg. 2019 Feb.

Abstract

Introduction: The authors' main purpose was to develop a detailed finite element model (FEM) of the human orbit and to validate it by analyzing its behavior under the stress of blunt traumas.

Materials and methods: A pre-existing 3D FEM of a human head was modified and used in this study. Modifications took into account preliminary research carried out on PubMed database. Data from a CT scan of the head were computed with Mimics® software to re-create the skull geometry. The mesh production, the model's properties and the simulations of blunt orbital traumas were conducted on Hyperworks® software.

Results: The resulting 3D FEM was composed of 640 000 elements and was used to perform blunt trauma simulations on an intact orbit. A total of 27 tests were simulated. Fifteen tests were realized with a metallic cylinder impactor; 12 tests simulated a hit by a closed fist. In all the tests conducted (27/27), the orbital floor was fractured. Fracture patterns were similar to those found in real clinical situations according to the buckling and hydraulic theories of orbital floor fractures.

Discussion: The similitude between the fracture patterns produced on the model and those observed in vivo allows for a validation of the model. This model constitutes, at the authors knowledge, the most sophisticated one ever developed.

Keywords: Biomechanics; Finite element analysis; Maxillofacial; Orbit; Trauma.

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