Overview and session details of the ESB2023 congress.
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Session Overview | |
Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) |
Date: Sunday, 09/July/2023 | |
8:30 - 10:30 | Pre-course 1: Statistical Shape Modeling Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) I. Lecture: Background and applications (Christophe Van Dijck, Materialise) - What are statistical shape models? - How to build shape models? - Applications - Comparison to AI II. Short intro of the Mimics innovation suite: How to create SSM of a human femur? (Arsham Makaryan, Materialise) |
11:00 - 13:00 | Pre-course 2: AI-basics and hybrid modelling: an introduction Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) I. Lecture: Hybrid Modelling (Francesco Regazzoni, Polimi) II. Use-case example: GANs for clinical data synthesis (Rajarajeswari Ganesan, TU/e, In-Silico World project) III. Use-case example: AI-based prediction of transvalvular pressure gradients in aortic stenosis (Jan Brüning, CHA, SIMCor) IV. Use-case example: Generating synthetic aorta shapes using diffusion networks (Teodor Matei, Siemens/UTBV) |
13:45 - 15:45 | Pre-course 3: In-silico clinical trials and virtual cohorts Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) I. Lecture: Virtual cohort generation and validation: a multi-level methodology (Wouter Huberts, TU/e, SIMCor) II. Use-case example: Virtual cohort generation of Aortic Valve Stenosis geometries (Sabine Verstraeten, SIMCor, TU/e) III. Use-case example: A statistical shape model of the porcine and human pulmonary artery for evaluation of medical devices (Jan Jan Brüning, CHA, SIMCor) IV. Use-case example: Automatic spine modelling for clinical cohorts (Joeri Kok, TU/e, ScoliStorm project, ERC advanced grant) |
16:15 - 18:15 | Pre-course 4: From patient-based to in-silico trials: status quo and future perspective Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) I. Lecture: Patient-based clinical trials (Pablo Verde, HHU) II. Lecture: From engineering metrics to clinical endpoints (Andreas Arndt, Biotronik) III. Round table discussion (Moderator: Liesbet Geris) |
Date: Monday, 10/July/2023 | |||||||||||
9:30 - 10:30 | Musculoskeletal / joint biomechanics I: Cartilage and contact mechanics Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) Session Chair: Ruth Wilcox Session Chair: Rami Korhonen | ||||||||||
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9:30 - 9:42
ID: 841 CONTACT-PRESSURE BASED, MULTI-SCALE KNEE MODEL TO PREDICT CARTILAGE DEGENERATION 1KU Leuven, Belgium; 2University of Eastern Finland, Finland
9:42 - 9:54
ID: 972 USING AN EQUIVALENT SURFACE TO QUANTIFY CONGRUENCE AND CONTACT VARIABILITY IN JOINTS University of Southampton, United Kingdom
9:54 - 10:06
ID: 423 PARAMETRIC ANALYSIS OF OSTEOCHONDRAL GRAFTS IN HUMAN TIBIOFEMORAL JOINTS University of Leeds, United Kingdom
10:06 - 10:18
ID: 689 KNEE CARTILAGE MECHANICS IN FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS USING INPUTS FROM DIFFERENT MUSCULOSKELETAL SOFTWARE 1University of Eastern Finland, Finland; 2Aalborg University, Denmark; 3Center for Mathematical Modeling of Knee Osteoarthritis, Aalborg, Denmark
10:18 - 10:30
ID: 697 QUANTIFYING CELL FORCES EXERTED BY CHONDROCYTES IN THE CONTEXT OF OSTEOARTHRITIS 1Biomechanics Section, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, KU Leuven; 2Laboratory for Soft Matter and Biophysics, Dept. of Physics and Astronomy, KU Leuven, Belgium; 3Human Movement Biomechanics Research Group, Dept. of Movement Sciences, KU Leuven, Belgium; 4Laboratory for Tissue Homeostasis and Disease, Dept. of Development and Regeneration, Skeletal Biology and Engineering Research Center, KU Leuven, Belgium; 5Prometheus Division of Skeletal Tissue Engineering, KU Leuven, Belgium External Resource: https://www.youtube.com/
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11:00 - 12:15 | Musculoskeletal / joint biomechanics II: Subject-specific and population modelling Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) Session Chair: Ruth Wilcox Session Chair: Rami Korhonen | ||||||||||
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11:00 - 11:25
ID: 134 POPULATION-BASED MODELING INSIGHTS IN JOINT FUNCTION AND LOADING IN KNEE OSTEOARTHRITIS SUBJECTS ku leuven, Belgium
11:25 - 11:37
ID: 290 EFFECT OF GEOMETRY FEATURES ON KNEE JOINT MECHANICS: SUBJECT-SPECIFIC VS GENERIC MODELS BASED ON 39 PATIENTS 1University of Calgary, Canada; 2Boise State University, United States
11:37 - 11:49
ID: 619 THE EFFECT OF VARIATION IN ANATOMICAL FEATURES ON KNEE JOINT LOADING: A POPULATION-BASED MODELLING APPROACH 1KU Leuven, Belgium; 2Materialise NV, Belgium; 3Laval University, Canada
11:49 - 12:01
ID: 861 OPEN HANDS: AN OPEN SOURCE STATISTICAL FINGER MODEL University of Southampton, United Kingdom
12:01 - 12:13
ID: 481 AUTOMATED SHOULDER MORPHING TO ASSESS SUBJECT SPECIFIC BIOMECHANICS OF ROTATOR CUFF TEAR AND OSTEOARTHRITIS 1Universität Bern, Switzerland; 2Cantonal Hospital St. Gallen, Switzerland; 3Clinica Santa Maria, Chile; 4Insel University Hospital Bern, Switzerland; 5Orthopaedics Sonnenhof, Switzerland; 6ETH Zurich, Switzerland
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12:15 - 13:15 | Women in Biomechanics Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) | ||||||||||
15:45 - 17:00 | Musculoskeletal / joint biomechanics III: Bone and tendon Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) Session Chair: Harry van Lenthe Session Chair: Pasquale Vena | ||||||||||
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15:45 - 15:57
ID: 744 CHANGES IN SUBCHONDRAL BONE MICROSTRUCTURE AND SHAPE WITH AGE IN TIBIAL KNEE 1University of Liège, Belgium; 2Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, Germany; 3University of Sheffield, UK; 4KU Leuven, Belgium
15:57 - 16:09
ID: 756 BIOMECHANICAL ASSESSMENT OF BONE GRAFT STABILITY USING A FEMORAL OVINE MODEL 1Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering, University of Leeds, United Kingdom; 2School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Leeds, United Kingdom
16:09 - 16:21
ID: 691 HYPERELASTIC MATERIAL PROPERTIES OF PORCINE GROWTH PLATES VARY BY ANATOMICAL LOCATION 1Personalized Biomedical Engineering Lab, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences, Frankfurt, Germany; 2Institute of Orthopaedic Research and Biomechanics, Ulm University Medical Centre, Ulm, Germany
16:21 - 16:33
ID: 218 DETERMINING STRESS RELAXATION OF TRABECULAR BONE TO SIMULATE PRESS-FIT CONDITIONS FOR CEMENTLESS IMPLANTS 1Radboudumc, Netherlands; 2Depuy Synthes, UK; 3University of Twente, Netherlands
16:33 - 16:45
ID: 847 3D STRAIN MEASUREMENT OF THE TENDON-BONE JUNCTION USING IN-SITU XCT MECHANICS AND DIGITAL VOLUME CORRELATION 1Department of Mechanical and Design Engineering, University of Portsmouth, UK; 2Department of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, University of Portsmouth, UK
16:45 - 16:57
ID: 560 A COMPUTATIONAL INVESTIGATION OF THE TENDON-TO-BONE INSERTION: THE ROLE OF TISSUE ANISOTROPY 1ULiège, Belgium; 2Politecnico di Milano, Italy
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17:00 - 18:00 | Musculoskeletal / joint biomechanics IV: Knee biomechanics Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) Session Chair: Petri Tanska Session Chair: Luca Modenese | ||||||||||
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17:00 - 17:12
ID: 554 IMU-BASED GROUND REACTION FORCES AND KNEE CONTACT FORCES ESTIMATION IN PATIENTS WITH KNEE OA KU Leuven, Belgium
17:12 - 17:24
ID: 682 SENSITIVITY OF KNEE JOINT FINITE ELEMENT SIMULATIONS TO UNCERTAINTIES IN MUSCULOSKELETAL MODELING INPUTS 1University of Eastern Finland, Finland; 2University of Copenhagen, Denmark; 3The Parker Institute, Denmark
17:24 - 17:36
ID: 796 RELIABILITY OF A NOVEL KNEE SIMULATOR AND ITS CONCURRENT VALIDITY AGAINST A VALIDATED DYNAMIC KNEE SIMULATOR 1Institute for Orthopaedic Research and Training (IORT), KU Leuven, Belgium; 2Department of Mechanical Engineering, IIT Bombay, Mumbai, India; 3Human Movement Biomechanics Research Group, KU Leuven, Belgium; 4Division of Orthopaedics, University Hospitals Leuven, Belgium
17:36 - 17:48
ID: 785 EXPERIMENTAL IDENTIFICATION OF A CONTINUOUS, NON-LINEAR MAP OF THE KNEE COMPLIANCE Dept. of Industrial Engineering – DIN, University of Bologna, Italy
17:48 - 18:00
ID: 359 UNILATERAL TRANSFEMORAL AMPUTEES MIGHT BE AT RISK OF LATERAL COMPARTMENT DEGENERATION OF THE KNEE JOINT Imperial College London, United Kingdom
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Date: Tuesday, 11/July/2023 | ||||||||||||
9:30 - 10:30 | Musculoskeletal / joint biomechanics V: Ligamentous effects Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) Session Chair: Esther Tanck Session Chair: Ronja Schierjott-Hermle | |||||||||||
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9:30 - 9:42
ID: 723 BIOMECHANICAL ANALYSIS OF KNEE JOINT FLEXION IN HEALTHY, CRUCIATE DEFICIENT AND CRUCIATE SUBSTITUTE CONDITIONS 1BEAMS Department, ULB - Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium; 2Department of Industrial Engineering, University of Padova, Padua, Italy
9:42 - 9:54
ID: 191 CAN OSTEOARTHRITIS AFTER ACL RECONSTRUCTION BE EXPLAINED BY (ALTERING) GRAFT MECHANICAL PROPERTIES? Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands, The
9:54 - 10:06
ID: 284 LENGTH CHANGES OF THE MEDIAL PATELLOFEMORAL LIGAMENT DURING IN VIVO KNEE MOTION: A DYNAMIC EVALUATION. 1Orthopaedic Research Laboratory, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands; 2Department of Orthopaedics, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
10:06 - 10:18
ID: 300 TIBIOFEMORAL GAPS OF HUMAN CADAVERIC KNEES BEFORE AND AFTER SACRIFICING BOTH CRUCIATE LIGAMENTS 1Research and Development, Aesculap AG, Tuttlingen, Germany; 2Department of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery, Musculoskeletal University Center Munich (MUM), Campus Grosshadern, LMU Munich, Munich, Germany; 3Department of Orthopaedics, Asklepios Klinikum, Bad Abbach, Germany
10:18 - 10:30
ID: 213 CONSEQUENCES OF LIMITING ELECTROMYOGRAPHY AND GROUND REACTION FORCES ON MODELLED ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT FORCES 1Griffith Centre of Biomedical and Rehabilitation Engineering (GCORE), Menzies Health Institute Queensland, Griffith University, Australia; 2Centre for Health, Exercise & Sports Medicine, University of Melbourne, Australia
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11:00 - 12:15 | Hard tissue biomechanics I: Multiscale Tissue Mechanics Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) Session Chair: Sara Checa Session Chair: Philippe Zysset | |||||||||||
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11:00 - 11:25
ID: 116 NEWS FROM THE DEEP: MULTISCALE TISSUE MECHANICS OF COLD-WATER CORALS IN A CHANGING OCEAN Heriot-Watt University, United Kingdom
11:25 - 11:37
ID: 504 PRIMARY STABILITY OF CEMENTLESS TIBIAL TRAYS DURING STAIR DESCENT AND DEEP KNEE BEND: A MICRO-CT AND DVC ANALYSIS 1Medical Device Research Institute, College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia; 2Orthopaedic Department, SportsMed, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
11:37 - 11:49
ID: 525 LONGITUDINAL SUBCHONDRAL BONE MICROSTRUCTURE AND JOINT LOADING IN RATS WITH POST-TRAUMATIC KNEE OSTEOARTHRITIS 1KU Leuven, Belgium; 2University of Sheffield, UK
11:49 - 12:01
ID: 755 MICROSCALE COMPACT BONE PROPERTIES OF PATIENTS WHO UNDERWENT HIP ARTHROPLASTY: INFLUENCE OF AGE AND GENDER 1Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology, Thun, Switzerland; 2ARTORG Center for Biomedical Engineering Research, University of Bern, Switzerland; 3Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Inselspital, University of Bern, Switzerland; 4ALPS Institute, Bern University of Applied Sciences, Burgdorf, Switzerland
12:01 - 12:13
ID: 815 IN VIVO MECHANICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF THE OSTEOPOROTIC DISTRACTION CALLUS 1Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingeniería, University of Seville, Spain; 2Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingeniería, University of Huelva, Spain; 3Hospital Clínico Veterinario, University of Córdoba, Spain; 4Instituto de Biomedicina de Sevilla, Spain
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12:15 - 13:15 | Meet the Expert Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) | |||||||||||
15:45 - 17:00 | Hard tissue biomechanics II: Bone Tissue Scale Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) Session Chair: Pankaj Pankaj Session Chair: Uwe Wolfram | |||||||||||
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15:45 - 16:10
ID: 122 OPTIMALITY OF TRABECULAR BONE AT THE CONTINUUM LEVEL University of Bern, Switzerland
16:10 - 16:22
ID: 457 MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF INDIVIDUAL OSTEOPOROTIC AND CONTROL TRABECULAE IN COMPRESSION 1Institute of Lightweight Design and Structural Biomechanics, TU Wien, AT; 2Division Biomechanics, Karl Landsteiner University of Health Sciences, AT
16:22 - 16:34
ID: 502 MECHANICAL LOADING OF EX VIVO BOVINE TRABECULAR BONE IN 3D-PRINTED BIOREACTORS 1Facultad de Ingeniería y Ciencias, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez, Chile; 2Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Queen's University, Canada
16:34 - 16:46
ID: 887 MICROMECHANICAL CHARACTERISATION OF OSTEOARTHRITIC SUBCHONDRAL BONE BY MICROPILLAR COMPRESSION 1Institute of Mechanical, Process and Energy Engineering, Heriot-Watt University, UK; 2Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering, University of Leeds, UK; 3Institute of Photonics and Quantum Sciences, Heriot-Watt University, UK; 4INSIGNEO Institute for in silico Medicine, University of Sheffield, UK
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17:00 - 18:00 | Musculoskeletal / joint biomechanics VI: Upper limb biomechanics Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) Session Chair: Daniel Baumgartner Session Chair: Annegret Muendermann | |||||||||||
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17:00 - 17:12
ID: 428 INFLUENCE OF THE TEAR PATTERN ON SHOULDER STABILITY AFTER ARTHROSCOPIC SUPERIOR CAPSULAR RECONSTRUCTION 1IDMEC, Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal; 2Hospital CUF Tejo, Portugal
17:12 - 17:24
ID: 718 LOAD-INDUCED SCAPULA ROTATION AFTER ROTATOR CUFF TEARS DURING A 30° ARM ABDUCTION MOVEMENT 1Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Basel, Switzerland; 2Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, University Hospital Basel, Switzerland; 3School for Biomedical and Precision Engineering, University of Bern, Switzerland; 4IMES Institute of Mechanical Systems, Zurich University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland; 5Department of Clinical Research, University of Basel, Switzerland; 6Department of Spine Surgery, University Hospital Basel, Switzerland
17:24 - 17:36
ID: 745 GLENOHUMERAL TRANSLATION AND MUSCLE FORCES IN EX VIVO SHOULDERS WITH ROTATOR CUFF INJURIES 1IMES Institute for Mechanical Systems, School of Engineering ZHAW, Switzerland; 2Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Basel, Switzerland; 3Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, University Hospital Basel, Switzerland; 4Department of Clinical Research, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland
17:36 - 17:48
ID: 402 REAL-TIME OPTIMIZATION OF UPPER LIMB JOINT KINEMATICS THROUGH A CONSTRAINED ISB-CONSISTENT MODEL Politecnico di Torino, Italy
17:48 - 18:00
ID: 669 THE MODULATION OF MUSCULAR SYNERGIES AS A FUNCTION OF UNEXPECTEDLY PERTURBED GRASPING TASKS 1Hannover Medical School, Germany; 2Leibniz University Hannover, Germany
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Date: Wednesday, 12/July/2023 | ||||||||||
9:30 - 10:30 | Musculoskeletal / joint biomechanics VII: Biomechanical measurement and modelling Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) Session Chair: William R. Taylor Session Chair: Ruth Wilcox | |||||||||
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9:30 - 9:42
ID: 164 IMPACT OF VELOCITY ON MUSCLE FORCE GENERATION DURING LONG ECCENTRIC CONTRACTIONS 1University of Stuttgart, Germany; 2University of Rostock, Germany
9:42 - 9:54
ID: 951 PREDICTIVE CONTROL OF PLANTARFLEXOR MUSCLE-TENDON FORCE DURING SIMULATED HUMAN HOPPING 1University of Twente, Netherlands; 2Georgia Institute of Technology, United States of America
9:54 - 10:06
ID: 444 A UNIFYING APPROACH FOR THE STANDARDISATION OF KINEMATIC SIGNALS 1Research and Development, Aesculap AG, Tuttlingen, Germany; 2Department of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery, Musculoskeletal University Centre Munich (MUM), Campus Grosshadern, Ludwig Maximilians University Munich, Munich, Germany; 3Laboratory for Movement Biomechanics, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
10:06 - 10:18
ID: 816 APPLICATION OF DIFFERENT OPTIMISATION CRITERIA TO STANDARDISE KINEMATIC SIGNALS 1Research and Development, Aesculap AG, Tuttlingen, Germany; 2Department of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery, Musculoskeletal University Centre Munich (MUM), Campus Grosshadern, Ludwig Maximilians University Munich, Munich, Germany; 3Laboratory for Movement Biomechanics, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
10:18 - 10:30
ID: 200 A LSTM FRAMEWORK FOR ANKLE JOINT BIOMECHANICS PREDICTIONS FROM INERTIAL SENSORS DURING GAIT 1Auckland Bioengineering Institute, The University of Auckland, New Zealand; 2Faculty of Sports Science, Ningbo University, China; 3Department of Engineering Science, The University of Auckland, New Zealand
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11:00 - 12:15 | Hard tissue biomechanics III: Bone Microstructure Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) Session Chair: Liesbet Geris Session Chair: Pankaj Pankaj | |||||||||
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11:00 - 11:25
ID: 135 MULTISCALE MODELLING OF BONE BIOMECHANICS - THE STRUCTURAL ROLES OF MINERAL AND ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS University of Galway, Ireland
11:25 - 11:37
ID: 273 MINERAL CONTENT AND MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF CEMENT LINES IN HUMAN OSTEONAL BONE 1University of Liège, Belgium; 2Ludwig Boltzmann Institute of Osteology, Austria; 3Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, Germany; 4Center of Forensics Medicine, Austria
11:37 - 11:49
ID: 884 BONE COLLAGEN TENSILE PROPERTIES OF THE AGEING HUMAN PROXIMAL FEMUR University of Bern - ARTORG Center for Biomedical Engineering Research, Switzerland
11:49 - 12:01
ID: 960 MECHANICAL ENVIROMENT AROUND OSTEOCYTES DURING PHYSIOLOGICAL LOADING The City College of New York, United States of America
12:01 - 12:13
ID: 964 MINERAL MOBILIZATION NEAR THE LACUNAR AND CANAL NETWORK IN LACTATION 1University of Utah, United States of America; 2University of California San Francisco, United States of America
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15:45 - 17:00 | Hard tissue biomechanics IV: Bone Strength Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) Session Chair: Bert van Rietbergen Session Chair: Uwe Wolfram | |||||||||
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15:45 - 15:57
ID: 446 THE CONTRIBUTION OF LOWER-MINERALIZED TISSUE TO THE STRENGTH OF FRACTURED DISTAL RADII DURING HEALING 1VieCuri Medical Center, Netherlands, The; 2Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands, The; 3Maastricht University Medical Center, Netherlands, The
15:57 - 16:09
ID: 496 PREDICTING FEMORAL STRENGTH FROM 2D-3D DXA FINITE ELEMENT MODELS ACROSS AGE AND ETHNICITIES 1Singapore-ETH Centre, Singapore; 2Institute for Biomechanics, ETH Zürich, Switzerland; 3Department of Biomedical Engineering, Lund University, Sweden; 4Department of Internal Medicine, Yonsei University College of Medicine, South Korea; 5Department of Biomedical Engineering, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, USA; 6Department of Technical Physics, University of Eastern Finland, Finland
16:09 - 16:21
ID: 529 BONE MATERIAL STRENGTH INDEX TO DIFFERENTIATE EARLY BONE STRUCTURE IN PATIENTS AFFECTED BY CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS 1UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health; 2Great Ormond Street Hospital; 3Durham University, United Kingdom
16:21 - 16:33
ID: 591 STATISTICAL MODELS INFORMED BY DXA IMAGES SLIGHTLY OUTPERFORM T-SCORE IN THE PREDICTION OF HIP FRACTURE 1PolitoBIOMed Lab, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Politecnico di Torino, Torino, Italy.; 2Department of Oncology and Metabolism University of Sheffield, UK.; 3Department of Mechanical Engineering and INSIGNEO Institute for in silico Medicine, University of Sheffield, UK.
16:33 - 16:45
ID: 825 QCT-BASED COMPUTATIONAL BONE STRENGTH ASSESSMENT UPDATED WITH MRI-DERIVED ‘HIDDEN’ MICROPOROSITY 1Institute of Mechanical, Process and Energy Engineering, Heriot-Watt University, UK.; 2Centre for Cardiovascular sciences and Edinburgh Imaging, University of Edinburgh, UK.; 3Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies and Roslin Institute, University of Edinburgh, UK
16:45 - 16:57
ID: 378 MINIMAL DETECTABLE FEATURES IN CT IMAGES AND DIGITAL 3D MODELS 1Department of Orthopedics and Trauma Surgery, Medical University of Vienna, Austria; 2Center for Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering, Medical University of Vienna, Austria; 3Department of Biomedical Imaging and Image-guided Therapy, Medical University of Vienna, Austria; 4Center for Anatomy and Cell Biology, Medical University of Vienna, Austria; 5Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Cardiovascular Research, Austria; 6Austrian Cluster for Tissue Regeneration, Austria
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17:00 - 18:15 | Musculoskeletal / joint biomechanics VIII: Muscle, modelling, in vivo measurement Location: Sydney (Room 0.10) Session Chair: Zimi Sawacha Session Chair: Sitikantha Roy | |||||||||
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17:00 - 17:12
ID: 794 OPTICAL COHERENCE TOMOGRAPHY (OCT) ASSOCIATED WITH CLEARING TECHNIQUE FOR MEASURING THE EVOLUTION AND DEGENERATION OF SKELETAL MUSCLE OPTICAL PARAMETERS 1University of Technology of Compiègne, France; 2Mines Saint-Etienne, Univ Jean Monnet Saint-Etienne, Inserm; 3Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia
17:12 - 17:24
ID: 741 MODELING OF ARTIFICIAL MUSCLE MADE OF A FIBER-REINFORCED CONDUCTING POLYMER FOR BIOMECHANICAL APPLICATIONS Dept. of Applied Mechanics, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, India
17:24 - 17:36
ID: 375 IMPACT OF EXTERNAL FLEXION MOMENT ON PATELLO FEMORAL LOADING DERIVED FROM IN VIVO LOADS AND KINEMATICS 1Julius Wolff Institute, Berlin Institute of Health at Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany; 2Institute for Biomechanics, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland
17:36 - 17:48
ID: 625 ARE KINEMATICS AND MUSCULAR FUNCTION ASSOCIATED WITH MOSAICISM TYPE IN MALES WITH FRAGILE X SYNDROME? 1Dept of Information Engineering, University of Padua, Padua, Italy; 2Dept of Women and Child Health - University of Padova, Italy; 3Dept of Medicine - University of Padova, Italy
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