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Remodelação Óssea por Análise de Elementos Finitos (FEA)×Dinâmica Inversa×Modelo de Windkessel×
ÁreaBiomecânicaBiomecânicaBiomecânica
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Ano de origem198719901969
Autor originalRik HuiskesDavid WinterNikolaos Westerhof
TipoMulti-physics finite element pipelineComputational analysis pipelinePhysiological lumped-parameter modeling
Fonte seminalHuiskes, R., Weinans, H., Grootenboer, H. J., Dalstra, M., Fudala, B., & Slooff, T. J. (1987). Adaptive bone-remodeling theory applied to prosthetic-design analysis. Journal of Biomechanics, 20(11-12), 1135-1150. DOI ↗Winter, D. A. (1990). Biomechanics and Motor Control of Human Movement. Wiley-Interscience. link ↗Westerhof, N., Bosman, F., De Vries, N. C., & Noordergraaf, A. (1969). Analog studies of the human systemic arterial tree. Journal of Biomechanics, 2(2), 121-143. DOI ↗
Outros nomesBone remodeling simulation, Trabecular architecture adaptation, Mechano-regulationInverse problem, Biomechanical inverse dynamicsElastic chamber model, Arterial compliance model, Lumped parameter model
Relacionados333
ResumoFinite element analysis (FEA) for bone remodeling predicts how bone tissue density and architecture adapt to changes in mechanical loading over time. Pioneered by Rik Huiskes and Donald Carter in the 1980s, this computational approach integrates stress analysis with biophysical remodeling rules to simulate the long-term response of bone to disease, aging, or surgical intervention.Inverse dynamics is a biomechanical analysis technique that estimates the forces and moments acting on joints during movement by working backward from observed motion and ground reaction forces. Introduced by David Winter in the early 1990s, it is fundamental to understanding how muscles and joints generate and control human motion.The Windkessel model is a lumped-parameter representation of the arterial system that captures the pulsatile dynamics of blood flow and pressure using simple mechanical analogs (resistors and capacitors). Named after the German word for air chamber, it was formalized by Westerhof and colleagues in the late 1960s and remains fundamental to understanding arterial hemodynamics and blood pressure regulation.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: FEA Bone Remodeling · Inverse Dynamics · Windkessel Model. Recuperado em 2026-06-19 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare