Note:

Decisions to make

...

PART I: Indentation

See Specifications/InVitroTesting/PartII for Part II: Surgery

Logistics

Part 1 - Indentation

Day 1

Day 2

Day 3

Morning

Thaw Specimen

Anthropometric/MRI Prep 8-9:30

Harvest Tissue

Mid

Thaw Specimen

CT & MRI 10-12

Freeze

Afternoon

Thaw Specimen

Ultrasound

Target Outcome

Prerequisites

Specifications

Infrastructure

Protocols

Input

Cadaver upper and lower legs and arms of the same donor. See Specifications/Specimen for details.

Procedures

Supplies/Equipment needed for experimentation

Antropometric Measurements

Refer to in vivo protocol as it is the same.

Specimen Preparation for MRI/Indentation

One specimen (e.g. Upper and Lower Leg) will be used at a time. See Specifications/SpecimenPreparation for details.

MRI protocol

See

Preparing Ultrasound

Refer to in vivo ultrasound set-up as it is the same.

Optotrak Marker Assembly on Bones

Acquisition of Registration Marker Locations and Anatomical Landmarks

Registration marker data collection

  1. Keep specimen within Optotrak measurement view.
  2. Use the digitizing probe to record registration marker locations along with Optotrak marker position/orientation output, measured with respect to the global Optotrak coordinate system for each respective bone
  3. Ten points on each spherical marker should be digitized such that they are distributed evenly about the sphere surface
  4. The spheres should be digitized in the following order:

Leg

  1. Femur
    1. F1. Anterior neck
    2. F2. Superior neck
    3. F3. Posterior neck
    4. F4. Lateral epicondyle
    5. F5. Posterior lateral condyle
    6. F6. Medial epicondyle
  2. Tibia
    1. T1. Laterial tibial condyle
    2. T2. Tibial tuberosity
    3. T3. Medial tibial condyle
    4. T4. Anterior margin
    5. T5. Distal anterior lateral surface
    6. T6. Medial malleolus

Arm

  1. Humerus
    1. H1. H1-H3 equidistant around circumference of head interface
    2. H2. H1-H3 equidistant around circumference of head interface
    3. H3. H1-H3 equidistant around circumference of head interface
    4. H4. Lateral epicondyle
    5. H5. Medial epicondyle
    6. H6. 1 cm superior of olecranon fossa (distal posterior middle)
  2. Radius
    1. R1. 1 cm superior of styloid process (distal lateral)
    2. R2. 1 cm lateral and superior of distal radioulnar joint (distal anterior medial)
    3. R3. Distal posterior middle
    4. R4. Lateral neck (superior lateral just below head)
    5. R5. Posterior neck (superior posterior just below head)

Anatomical Landmark data collection

  1. Keep specimen within Optotrak measurement view.
  2. Use the digitizing probe to record anatomical landmark locations along with Optotrak marker position/orientation output, measured with respect to the global Optotrak coordinate system for each respective bone.
  3. The following anatomical landmarks will be collected:

Leg

  1. Femur
    1. Lateral Femoral Epicondyle
    2. Medial Femoral Epicondyle
    3. Femoral Head Point 1
    4. Femoral Head Point 2
    5. Femoral Head Point 3
    6. Femoral Head Point 4
  2. Tibia
    1. Lateral Tibial Plateau
    2. Medial Tibial Plateau
    3. Lateral Malleolus
    4. Lateral Malleolus (again)
    5. Medial Malleolus
    6. Medial Malleolus (again

Arm

  1. Humerus
    1. Lateral Epicondyle
    2. Medial Epicondyle
    3. Humeral Head Point 1
    4. Humeral Head Point 2
    5. Humeral Head Point 3
    6. Humeral Head Point 4
  2. Ulna
    1. Lateral Epicondyle
    2. Medial Epicondyle
    3. Ulnar Styloid

Note that the specifications dictate that all specimens should be from the right side. If the data collection software is used to collect data from a left specimen, the data file labels will be incorrect as right handed coordinate systems will be created for the left knee. The following chart describes the anatomical meaning for each segment.

Ultrasound Indentation

Refer to in vivo wiki as it is the same protocol.

Tissue Harvesting

A region of tissue (skin fat muscle) will be excised from the indentation region of the thigh. This will be labeled and immediately frozen as is. Samples will be cut to size prior to mechanical testing.

Mechanical Testing

Need:

Preparation

Six equally sized samples will be collected from the indentation region. The region will be excised, then samples will be dissected.

Testing

Tensile Testing

Compression (unconfined)

Failure Tests

Output

Preliminary Work