The stress and strain pattern in the ligaments of the acromioclavicular joint using a quasi-static model

Ausberto Velasquez Garcia*, Farid Salamé, Joaquín Mura

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: The precise role of the acromioclavicular and coracoclavicular ligaments during shoulder motion is unclear. We evaluate changes in the stress-strain distribution of the acromioclavicular joint's ligaments during different shoulder passive motion positions. Methods: A 3D acromioclavicular joint model was reconstructed. A constitutive hyperelastic model was used for the ligaments. The kinematics of the shoulder girdle was taken to simulate shoulder abduction (Motion 1) and horizontal adduction (Motion 2). A computer-generated quasi-static and non-linear finite element model was used to predict the 3D stress-strain distribution pattern of the acromioclavicular ligament and the coracoclavicular ligament complex. Findings: In motion 1, from 20 to 90° the peak von Mises stress was found in the conoid (4.14 MPa) and the anteroinferior bundle (2.46 MPa), while from 90 to 120° it was found in the conoid and the trapezoid. However, there were no significant differences between the mean stress values between anteroinferior bundle and trapezoid throughout the motion (p = 0.98). In Motion 2, from 20 to 80° the maximum equivalent elastic strain was found in the anteroinferior bundle (0.68 mm/mm) and the conoid (0.57 mm/mm), while from 80 to 100° it was higher in the conoid (0.88 mm/mm) than in the anteroinferior bundle (0.77 mm/mm). Interpretation: The coracoclavicular ligament complex demonstrated a high stress-strain concentration during simulated passive shoulder abduction. Additionally, it was shown that the acromioclavicular ligament plays an important role in joint restraint during passive horizontal adduction, changing the primary role with the trapezoid and conoid at different motion intervals.

Original languageEnglish
Article number105859
JournalClinical Biomechanics
Volume101
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd

Keywords

  • Acromioclavicular joint
  • Acromioclavicular ligament
  • Coracoclavicular ligaments
  • Finite element analysis
  • Horizontal adduction
  • Shoulder girdle motion
  • Stress-strain analysis

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