The objective of this study was to determine a relationship between shear stress and strain for human brain tissue by performing transient, single-pulse, high-rate, shear displacement tests. A constant velocity, parallel plate shear test device was designed and fabricated. This equipment generated constant rate shear strains in cylindrical tissue samples mounted between the shear plates. The transverse reaction force at the upper end of the sample was measured during the event with a sensitive quartz piezoelectric force transducer, thus obtaining the force associated with the displacement versus time ramp. Shear tests were performed on 125 tissue samples taken from twelve fresh cadaver brain specimens. The average true shear stress and finite strain were calculated. A nonlinear, viscoelastic, standard solid model was fit to the constant rate test data and the material constants were determined.
Ultrasound velocity (UV) and broadband ultrasound attenuation (BUA) were studied in human and bovine bone with a wide range of bone mineral density (BMD). The BMD of 98 fresh specimens was measured by quantitative computed tomography: 42 cancellous specimens from women in the age group of 64 +/- 4 years; 51 bovine cancellous and 5 bovine cortical. BMD values ranged from 90 to 400 mg/cm3 for the human cancellous bone, 310 to 870 mg/cm3 for the bovine cancellous bone, and 1750 to 1780 mg/cm3 for the bovine cortical bone. BMD showed a strong linear correlation with apparent density over the entire range of density (r = 0.979). UV of human and bovine cancellous bone was 1480-2650 m/s and 2880-3100 m/s for bovine cortical bone. BUA values were 1-61 dB/MHz/cm for the cancellous specimens and 5-12 dB/MHz/cm for cortical specimens. UV was found to be linear with BMD for all specimens; however, BUA was linear with BMD only for the specimens from elderly women. A quadratic relationship between BUA and BMD was found when the bovine samples were included.
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