Effect of Impact Parameters on a Unilateral Contusion Model of Spinal Cord Injury in a Virtual Population of Non-Human Primates.

IF 1.8 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Neurotrauma reports Pub Date : 2023-06-01 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1089/neur.2023.0006
Numaira Obaid, Ana-Maria Bojic, Shervin Jannesar, Ernesto Salegio, Yvette Nout-Lomas, Michael Beattie, Jacqueline Bresnahan, Carolyn Sparrey
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Abstract

Non-human primate (NHP) spinal cord injury experiments exhibit high intersubject variability in biomechanical parameters even when a consistent impact protocol is applied to each subject. Optimizing impact parameters to reduce this variability through experiments is logistically challenging in NHP studies. Finite element models provide a complimentary tool to inform experimental design without the cost and complexity of live animal studies. A morphologically variable virtual population (N = 10) of NHPs quantified the interaction of morphological variability and different impact conditions in a unilateral cervical contusion, including impactor size (4 and 5 mm) and mediolateral alignment over the cord midline (0.5 and 1 mm). We explored the effect of these conditions on the magnitude and intersubject variability of impact force and cord lateral slippage. The study demonstrated that a 1-mm mediolateral alignment maximized peak forces and minimized lateral slippage. A 5-mm impactor was beneficial in increasing peak forces, whereas a 4-mm impactor reduced lateral slippage. Comparatively, intersubject variability in peak forces and lateral slippage were minimized with a 0.5-mm mediolateral alignment. The study highlights that impact parameters selected based on peak forces may not be beneficial in reducing variability. The study also showed that morphology was an important contributor to variability. Integrating morphology variability through a virtual population in an injury simulation to investigate mechanistic research questions will more effectively capture the heterogeneity of experiments and provide better insights for effective experimental design.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

冲击参数对非人灵长类虚拟群体脊髓损伤单侧挫伤模型的影响
非人灵长类(NHP)脊髓损伤实验在生物力学参数方面表现出很高的受试者间变异性,即使对每个受试者采用一致的冲击方案。在非人灵长类研究中,通过实验优化冲击参数以减少这种变异性在逻辑上具有挑战性。有限元模型提供了一种辅助工具,可为实验设计提供信息,而无需活体动物研究的成本和复杂性。一个形态可变的虚拟 NHPs 群体(N = 10)量化了单侧颈椎挫伤中形态可变性与不同撞击条件的相互作用,包括撞击器大小(4 毫米和 5 毫米)和脊髓中线的内外侧对齐(0.5 毫米和 1 毫米)。我们探讨了这些条件对撞击力和脊髓侧向滑动的大小和受试者间变异性的影响。研究表明,1 毫米的内外侧对齐可使峰值力最大化,并使侧向滑动最小化。5 毫米撞击器有利于增加峰值力,而 4 毫米撞击器则减少了侧向滑动。相比之下,0.5 毫米的内外侧对齐可使受试者之间的峰值力和侧向滑移变异性最小。该研究强调,根据峰值力选择冲击参数可能不利于减少变异性。研究还表明,形态是造成变异性的一个重要因素。通过伤害模拟中的虚拟群体来整合形态变异性,以研究机理研究问题,将更有效地捕捉实验的异质性,并为有效的实验设计提供更好的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
8 weeks
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