Litcius/Paper detail

A statistical shape model of the tibia-fibula complex: sexual dimorphism and effects of age on reconstruction accuracy from anatomical landmarks

Olivia L. Bruce, Michael Baggaley, Lauren Welte, Michael J. Rainbow, W. Brent Edwards

2021Computer Methods in Biomechanics & Biomedical Engineering21 citationsDOI

Abstract

A statistical shape model was created for a young adult population and used to predict tibia and fibula geometries from bony landmarks. Reconstruction errors with respect to CT data were quantified and compared to isometric scaling. Shape differences existed between sexes. The statistical shape model estimated tibia-fibula geometries from landmarks with high accuracy (RMSE = 1.51-1.62 mm), improving upon isometric scaling (RMSE = 1.78 mm). Reconstruction errors increased when the model was applied to older adults (RMSE = 2.11-2.17 mm). Improvements in geometric accuracy with shape model reconstruction changed hamstring moment arms 25-35% (1.0-1.3 mm) in young adults.

Topics & Concepts

FibulaIsometric exerciseTibiaSexual dimorphismOrthodonticsForensic anthropologyMean squared errorMathematicsStatistical modelAnatomyMedicineStatisticsGeographyPhysical therapyInternal medicineArchaeologyBody Composition Measurement TechniquesLower Extremity Biomechanics and PathologiesBone fractures and treatments