Institutions
|
About Us
|
Help
|
Gaeilge
0
1000
Home
Browse
Advanced Search
Search History
Marked List
Statistics
A
A
A
Author(s)
Institution
Publication types
Funder
Year
Limited By:
Subject = medical image analysis;
2 items found
Sort by
Title
Author
Item type
Date
Institution
Peer review status
Language
Order
Ascending
Descending
25
50
100
per page
Bibtex
CSV
EndNote
RefWorks
RIS
XML
Displaying Results 1 - 2 of 2 on page 1 of 1
Marked
Mark
Characterising 3D Soft Tissue Features on Joint Surfaces
(2011)
O'Kane, Colm
Characterising 3D Soft Tissue Features on Joint Surfaces
(2011)
O'Kane, Colm
Abstract:
A crucial aspect of orthopaedic implant design is the prediction of surgical outcomes when the shape of a bone is necessarily altered by the addition of the implant. Matching native kinematics as closely as possible is generally considered a core aim of joint replacement surgery. The overall hypothesis behind this research is that soft tissue geometry, including cartilage thickness distribution and ligament attachment sites, influences kinematics in the knee joint. In order to enable investigation of possible links between geometry and kinematics, the ability to characterise the shape variation of the soft tissue relative to the underlying bony geometry must first be developed. This is the aspect which has been addressed in this work.
https://arrow.dit.ie/biodevcon/2
Marked
Mark
Characterising 3D Soft Tissue Features on Joint Surfaces
(2011)
O'Kane, Colm
Characterising 3D Soft Tissue Features on Joint Surfaces
(2011)
O'Kane, Colm
Abstract:
A crucial aspect of orthopaedic implant design is the prediction of surgical outcomes when the shape of a bone is necessarily altered by the addition of the implant. Matching native kinematics as closely as possible is generally considered a core aim of joint replacement surgery. The overall hypothesis behind this research is that soft tissue geometry, including cartilage thickness distribution and ligament attachment sites, influences kinematics in the knee joint. In order to enable investigation of possible links between geometry and kinematics, the ability to characterise the shape variation of the soft tissue relative to the underlying bony geometry must first be developed. This is the aspect which has been addressed in this work.
https://arrow.dit.ie/biodevoth/2
Displaying Results 1 - 2 of 2 on page 1 of 1
Bibtex
CSV
EndNote
RefWorks
RIS
XML
built by Enovation Solutions