Journal of Biomechanics
Volume 38, Issue 5 , Pages 993-1001, May 2005

Strain energy density as a rupture criterion for the kidney: impact tests on porcine organs, finite element simulation, and a baseline comparison between human and porcine tissues

  • J.G. Snedeker

      Affiliations

    • ETH and University Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Institute for Biomedical Engineering, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, ETZ K64, Gloriastrasse 35, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland. Tel.: +41-1-632-45-87; fax: +41-1-632-11-93
  • ,
  • M. Barbezat

      Affiliations

    • EMPA, Dübendorf, Switzerland
  • ,
  • P. Niederer

      Affiliations

    • ETH and University Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
  • ,
  • F.R. Schmidlin

      Affiliations

    • University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland
  • ,
  • M. Farshad

      Affiliations

    • EMPA, Dübendorf, Switzerland

Accepted 27 May 2004. published online 19 August 2004.

Abstract 

High-velocity (up to 25m/s) impact tests were performed on pig kidneys to characterize failure behavior at deformation rates associated with traumatic injury. Cylindrical tissue samples (n=45) and whole perfused organs (n=34) were impacted using both falling weights and a high-velocity pneumatic projectile impactor. Impact energy was incrementally increased until visible rupture occurred. The strain energy density failure threshold fell between 25 and 60kJ/m3 for excised porcine tissue samples, and between 15 and 30kJ/m3 for whole, perfused organs. The relationship between localized failure in whole organ impacts and tissue level failure thresholds observed in cylindrical tissue samples was explored using a detailed finite element model of the human kidney. The model showed good correlation between experimentally observed injury patterns and predicted strain energy density distributions within the renal parenchyma. Finally, to facilitate interpretation of the porcine renal impact results with regard to human trauma, quasi-static compression test results of freshly excised human kidney cortex samples (n=30) were compared against similar tests on pig kidneys. Human tissues failed at Lagrange strain levels similar to porcine tissue (63±6.3%), but at 52% lower Lagrange stress (116±28kPa), and 35% lower strain energy density (17.1±4.4kJ/m3). Thus conservative interpretation of porcine test results is recommended.

Keywords:  Impact, Kidney, Failure behavior, Finite element model

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PII: S0021-9290(04)00269-6

doi:10.1016/j.jbiomech.2004.05.030

Journal of Biomechanics
Volume 38, Issue 5 , Pages 993-1001, May 2005