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Article

Joint Stress Analysis of the Navicular Bone of the Horse and Its Implications for Navicular Disease

by
Franz Konstantin Fuss
1,2
1
Chair of Biomechanics, Faculty of Engineering Science, University of Bayreuth, D-95447 Bayreuth, Germany
2
Department of Biomechatronics, Division of Biomechanics, Fraunhofer Institute of Production Engineering and Automation IPA, D-95447 Bayreuth, Germany
Bioengineering 2024, 11(1), 87; https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering11010087
Submission received: 12 December 2023 / Revised: 5 January 2024 / Accepted: 12 January 2024 / Published: 17 January 2024
(This article belongs to the Section Biomechanics and Sports Medicine)

Abstract

:
The horse’s navicular bone is located inside the hoof between the deep flexor tendon (DDFT) and the middle and end phalanges. The aim of this study was to calculate the stress distribution across the articular surface of the navicular bone and to investigate how morphological variations of the navicular bone affect the joint forces and stress distribution. Joint forces normalised to the DDFT force were calculated from force and moment equilibria from morphological parameters determined on mediolateral radiographs. The stress distribution on the articular surface was determined from the moment equilibrium of the stress vectors around the centre of pressure. The ratio of the proximal to the distal moment arms of the DDFT, as well as the proximo-distal position and extent of the navicular bone, individually or in combination, have a decisive influence on the position and magnitude of the joint force and the stress distribution. If the moment arms are equal and the bone is more proximal, the joint force vector originates from the centre of the joint surface and the joint load is evenly distributed. However, in a more distal position with a longer distal moment arm, the joint force is close to the distal edge, where the joint stress reaches its peak. Degenerative navicular disease, which causes lameness and pathological changes in the distal portion of the bone in sport horses, is likely to be more severe in horses with wedge-shaped navicular bones than in horses with square bones.

1. Introduction

Unlike typical sesamoid bones, which are incorporated into a tendon or serve as an attachment for two tendinous shanks and are in contact with only one bone, the navicular bone (Figure 1) of the horse’s hoof is not included in a tendon and furthermore articulates with two bones. Therefore, it has two joint surfaces, one (A in Figure 1; naviculo-medio-phalangeal joint, NMP joint; Table 1) for the middle phalanx (short pastern bone) and the other (B in Figure 1; naviculo-disto-phalangeal joint, NDP joint) for the hoof or coffin bone (distal phalanx). The deep digital flexor tendon (DDFT) is wrapped around the navicular bone and, thus, exerts compressive forces rather than tensile forces on the navicular bone. The only similarity to a true sesamoid bone is that the navicular bone increases the moment arm of the tendon involved (DDFT). The navicular bone provides a constant insertion angle of the DDFT, and maintains its mechanical advantage [1,2] and also serves as an anticussion device [3,4,5].
The navicular bone is affected by degenerative navicular disease or podotrochleosis, which is one of the most common causes of performance-limiting lameness [6]. Navicular disease is a common syndrome in sport horses such as gallopers, jumpers, and Western horses, particularly in quarter horses [7]. Navicular disease is not only an overuse syndrome but also an inherited disease [8,9]. Vascular pathological changes occur mainly in the distal part of the bone: the arterial supply shifts from distal to proximal with increasing severity of the navicular disease [10,11], and the conical nutritional foramina transform into circular or mushroom-shaped canals [12]. Bentley et al. [13] found that navicular disease is associated with “high microcrack surface density” and “low bone volume fraction”. The navicular bone shows clear morphological variations that are also hereditary. Ueltschi et al. [9] differentiated three groups of specific navicular bone types (square, wedge-shaped, and trapezoid) in mediolateral radiographs of three groups of foals descended from three different stallions. Dik and van den Broek [14] associated severe degrees of navicular disease with the shape of the navicular bone in dorsopalmar radiographs, specifically when the proximal articular margin is convex. Since pathological changes can be easily diagnosed on lateral and dorsopalmar radiographs, a radiological assessment of the hooves is an integral element of pre-purchase examinations [15], an essential part of the horse purchasing process. Wilson et al. [16] calculated the force exerted by the DDFT on the navicular bone in sound horses and horses with navicular disease and concluded that this force was twice as large in the diseased cohort as in the control group, particularly in the early stance phase. The reason for this result was that the centre of pressure (origin of the ground reaction force) on the sole of the hoof was more cranial in the diseased group and was, therefore, responsible for a longer moment arm and a larger moment of the ground reaction force.
The literature gap to be addressed and filled in this study is that the polymorphic nature of the navicular bone [9] has, to date, never been considered for biomechanical studies. By filling this gap, a contribution to the literature is presented, relating to how different shapes of the navicular bone influence its loading pattern and stress distribution. Another contribution to the literature is the development of an analytical method for calculating the stress distribution, taking into account the fact that extreme loading cases (near an edge) could offload portions of an articular surface. The related research question is whether an apparent difference in the shape of the navicular bone could make a significant difference in the stress distribution in the sense that an unfavourable stress distribution could trigger or worsen the navicular disease.
The aim of this study is, therefore, to analyse the loading of the navicular bone (forces and joint surface stress), to relate morphological parameters to navicular bone mechanics, and to identify mechanically advantageous parameters. In addition, this study aims to provide a method for calculating forces and articular surface stresses acting on the navicular bone from lateral radiographs.

2. Materials and Methods

(A)
Radiographs
The data for the biomechanical analysis were obtained from lateromedial forelimb radiographs (Figure 1) of 116 horses. A total of 98 radiographs were taken during pre-purchase examination. The remaining 18 were taken from cadaver samples, mounted on a rig with the hoof sole flat on the ground and under DDFT tension, with the DDFT marked with a thin steel wire [17].
(B)
Biomechanical principles
The centre of curvature (which was also used as the rotation centre in this study) of the coffin joint (distal interphalangeal joint) was determined by fitting a circle into the joint surface on the radiograph through three points (proximal and distal edges of the navicular joint surface, and cranial edge of the distal interphalangeal joint surface). With respect to the rotation centre, the moment arms (Figure 2) of the acting forces were measured considering the DDFT diameter (the force vectors of the tendon were placed in the centreline of the tendon). To make the navicular bone mechanics independent of the proximal tendon angle τ (Figure 3), τ was set at 50° with respect to the sole surface of the hoof because the pastern angle of the forelimbs is between 48° and 55° [18].
The proximal moment arm p of the DDFT force and that of the force of the navicular–hoof bone joint (B in Figure 1), sFS, or of the distal impar ligament, sFL, were normalised to the distal moment arm d of the DDFT force. The angles measured to define the geometry and position of the navicular bone are shown in Figure 3 and detailed in Table 1.
The free body diagram (Figure 2) used in this analysis consisted of the navicular bone as well as the DDFT section in contact with the navicular bone and all forces acting on them. These forces are (1) distal and (2) proximal force vectors FT of the DDFT; (3) the force of the joint between the navicular bone and the hoof bone, FS; or the distal impar ligament, FL, depending on which of the two is loaded; and (4) the joint force between the middle phalanx and navicular bone, FJ. It was assumed that the friction on the lubricated articular surfaces and on the navicular bursa (between bone and DDFT) was negligible and, thus, the distal and proximal FT are equal.
The lateral collateral sesamoid ligament, which originates from the distal end of the proximal phalanx and is attached to the lateral angle of the navicular bone, was not included in the FBD because it relaxes during weight bearing, particularly when standing or in midstance when moving [19,20].
(C)
Mathematical analysis
The biomechanical parameters calculated in this study were as follows:
(a)
FS or FL, whichever is required for the moment equilibrium, normalised to FT;
(b)
FJ, normalised to FT;
(c)
The direction of FJ in terms of the angle φ;
(d)
The position of FJ at the articular surface (centre of pressure, COP; Figure 3);
(e)
The articular surface pressure P.
(1)
Moment equilibrium about the rotation centre of the hoof joint
The moment equilibrium (sum Σ of all moments Mz acting about the z-axis of the coordinate system) about the rotation centre of the hoof joint was calculated as follows:
Σ M z   i f   d > p 50 :   s F S · F S + d · F T p 50   · F T + F J · 0 = 0 Σ M z   i f   d = p 50 :                               + d · F T p 50   · F T + F J · 0 = 0 Σ M z   i f   d < p 50 :   + s F L · F L + d · F T p 50   · F T + F J · 0 = 0
The moment arm sFS is shorter than sFL; however, only one of the two forces, FS or FL, is required for the moment equilibrium if dp50.
(2)
Force equilibrium:
The force equilibrium (sum Σ of all forces Fx or Fy acting along the x- and y-axes of the coordinate system; Figure 3) was calculated as follows:
Σ F x   i f   d > p 50 :   F S sin λ S + F T cos δ F T cos τ + F J x = 0 Σ F x   i f   d = p 50 :                                         + F T cos δ F T cos τ + F J x = 0 Σ F x   i f   d < p 50 :   + F L sin λ L + F T cos δ F T cos τ + F J x = 0
Σ F y   i f   d > p 50 :   + F S cos λ S F T sin δ + F T sin τ + F J y = 0 Σ F y   i f   d = p 50 :                                         F T sin δ + F T sin τ + F J y = 0 Σ F y   i f   d < p 50 :   F L cos λ L F T sin δ + F T sin τ + F J y = 0
(3)
Joint forces:
FS and FL are calculated from Equation (1), and FJx and FJy are obtained from Equations (2) and (3). The resultant joint force FJ is obtained from the following equation:
F J = F J x 2 + F J y 2
(4)
Direction of the joint force and position of the centre of pressure (COP):
The direction of FJ, angle φ (Figure 2 and Figure 3; Table 1), located in the 3rd quadrant of the coordinate system (Figure 3), is expressed as the angle between negative y-axis and FJ:
φ = tan 1 F J x F J y
The COP is obtained from
COP ( % ) = 100 φ α β α = 100 φ α γ
where 0% and 100% correspond to the proximal and distal edges of the joint surface, respectively (Figure 3).
(5)
Calculation of the pressure distribution on the articular surface:
In lubricated cylindrical joint surfaces covered with hyaline cartilage, the function of the distribution of pressure P on the joint surface is
P θ = P 0 cos θ
where θ is the angle between any point on the joint surface and the stress pole, and P0 denotes the maximal pressure at the stress pole where θ = 0 [21].
Due to lubrication, only normal forces act on the surface, so the frictional forces that cause shear stress can be assumed to be negligible. The normal forces distributed across the articular surface cause compressive contact stress Pθ. To calculate Pθ from Equation (7), we need to determine P0.
From first principles, the following equalities apply:
(a)
The sum of Pθ (times unit area) is equal to FJ; more specifically, the sum of Pθx′ (times unit area), the Pθ-component perpendicular to FJ, is equal to 0 (force equilibrium), and the sum of Pθy′ (times unit area), the Pθ-component parallel to FJ, is equal to FJ;
(b)
The sum of Pθ-moments about the COP is equal to 0 (moment equilibrium); the moment arm l of Pθ is the shortest distance between Pθ and the COP.
Before determining P0, we calculate the angle η, the angle between the FJ- and P0-vectors. This is achieved by equating the integrals of Pθx′ and Pθ l to 0 (force and moment equilibriums), as shown subsequently.
Force equilibrium:
The boundaries of the weight-bearing area are the distal and proximal edges of the articular surface, denoted by θdist and θprox, respectively (Figure 3). Note that θdistθprox = γ. However, if surface extends more than 0.5π on the distal or proximal side of the stress pole, θdist or θprox are set to −0.5π or +0.5π, respectively, since Pθ cannot be negative. Negative pressure means that the articular surface were under tensile stress when the articular surfaces were not in loose contact.
P θ x = P θ sin θ = P 0 cos θ sin θ
P θ y = P θ cos θ = P 0 cos 2 θ
The x- and y-components of the surface stress must be calculated in terms of the joint force FJ and not in terms of P0. The position of the force vector FJ on the articular surface is defined as the centre of pressure (COP). If the articular surface angles on both sides of the stress pole are unequal, i.e., θprox + θdist ≠ 0, then the COP, i.e., the origin of FJ, does not coincide with the stress pole, i.e., the origin of P0. Thus, the load is distributed asymmetrically. The angle between the force vector FJ and the maximum pressure vector P0 is denoted by η. At P0, θ = 0; at FJ, θ + η = 0. The angles with respect to the COP and FJ are denoted by ζ, where
ζ = θ + η
Thus, the x’- and y’-components of the surface stress with respect to the joint force FJ are
P θ x = P θ sin ζ = P θ sin ( θ + η ) = P 0 cos θ sin ( θ + η )
P θ y = P θ cos ζ = P θ cos ( θ + η ) = P 0 cos θ cos ( θ + η )
Considering that the x’- and y’-components of the surface stress are aligned with the joint force FJ, so that FJ points downward, in the negative y’-direction, integration of Equations (11) and (12) across the joint surface area returns zero and FJ, respectively. For reasons of comparison, the articular surface is simplified as a cylindrical surface with constant radius R and mediolateral width W. When integrating over θ, from θprox to θdist, W and R are set to unity to normalise the stress values.
W   R   P 0 ζ 2 η ζ 1 η cos θ cos ( θ + η )   d θ = F J
W   R   P 0 ζ 2 η ζ 1 η c o s θ sin ( θ + η )   d θ = 0
where
ζ 1 η = θ d i s t + π / 2
ζ 2 η = θ p r o x π / 2
θdist and θprox, with respect to the stress pole, are calculated from two angles on either side of the COP and FJ, namely from ζ1 and ζ2 (Figure 3):
ζ 1 = β φ
ζ 2 = α φ = ζ 1 γ
Moment equilibrium:
Calculating η from the moment equilibrium about the COP depends on the basic definition of the COP: all surface pressure vectors (times unit area) are in equilibrium about the COP. The moment is equal to Pθ times unit area multiplied by the shortest distance between Pθ and the COP. The latter distance is the moment arm l, which is a function of θ:
l = R sin ( θ + η )
In Equation (19), we must again consider that l is calculated in terms of the COP and not in terms of P0, and thus, in terms of ζ. The moment arm l must be zero at the COP, i.e., at η = −θ, and not at the stress pole where θ = 0.
Substituting and integrating over θ gives the overall moment Mz about the z-axis, which must be zero.
W   R 2   P 0 ζ 2 η ζ 1 η cos θ sin ( θ + η )   d θ = 0
Equations (14) and (20) must and expectedly yield the same integral to reduce to
ζ 2 η ζ 1 η c o s θ sin ( θ + η )   d θ = 0
Calculation of η if the entire articular surface is loaded:
Solving Equation (21) for η by simplifying and applying summation laws yields:
η = tan 1 cos 2 ζ 1 cos 2 ζ 2 sin 2 ζ 2 sin 2 ζ 1 + 2 ζ 1 ζ 2 = tan 1 cos 2 ζ 1 cos 2 ζ 2 sin 2 ζ 2 sin 2 ζ 1 + 2 γ  
If ζ1 + ζ2 = 0, i.e., the COP is at 50%, and then η = 0, and thus, P0 originates from the COP.
Once η is known, P0 is calculated from Equation (13)
P 0 = 4 F J W   R     1 sin η cos 2 ζ 2 cos 2 ζ 1 + cos η sin 2 ζ 1 sin 2 ζ 2 + 2 ζ 1 2 ζ 2
Equation (23) defines the unique relationship between the joint force vector FJ originating from the COP and the peak joint stress vector P0 originating from the stress pole. η defines the angle between these two vectors. η is independent of the magnitude of the vectors and depends only on the relative position of the COP within the articular surface, defined by angles ζ1 and ζ2. From η calculated from Equation (22), we obtain θprox and θdist from Equations (15) and (16).
Calculation of η if the joint surface is partially loaded:
If θprox < −π/2 (or θdist > +π/2), then any stress at |θ|> π/2 would be tensile if the mating articular surfaces were not in loose contact. Therefore, γ must be adjusted and limited to the area that is effectively subjected to compressive stress, and particularly limited to γeff. This is achieved by reducing θprox to −π/2 (or θdist to +π/2), with the stress equal to zero. Consequently, η changes to ηeff.
If θprox < −π/2:
θ p r o x _ e f f = ζ 2 _ e f f η e f f = π / 2
θ d i s t _ e f f = ζ 1 η e f f
As a result, we obtain two unknowns, namely ηeff and θdist_eff. However, relative to the ζ-angles, the two unknowns are ηeff and ζ2_eff.
Substituting
ζ 2 _ e f f = η e f f π 2
into Equation (22) yields
cos 2 ζ 1 cos 2 η e f f π sin 2 η e f f π sin 2 ζ 1 + 2 ζ 1 2 η e f f + π tan η e f f = 0
Solving Equation (27) numerically delivers the unknown variable ηeff (<π/2) and, subsequently, from Equations (24) and (25), θprox_eff and θdist_eff.
Alternatively, ηeff (<π/2) is obtained directly from a non-linear regression function f, where ηeff = f (ζ1):
For 0° ≤ ζ1 ≤ 90°, ηeff (in degrees) is
ηeff = 90 − 2.02∙ζ1 + 0.0026∙ζ12 + 9.62×10−5ζ13 + 4.13×10−6ζ14 − 9.79×10−8ζ15 + 8.16×10−10ζ16 − 3.02×10−12ζ17 + 4.20×10−15ζ18
For 5° ≤ ζ1 ≤ 35° (range of the current dataset, although only data of ζ1 < 15° are relevant), ηeff (in degrees) is
ηeff = 90 − 1.99∙ζ1 − 0.00093∙ζ12 + 0.0003∙ζ13 − 2.02×10−6ζ14
For small ζ1, the fit functions of Equations (28) and (29) reduce to 90 − 2 ζ1. As ζ1 → 0°, ηeff → 90°, but ηeff is mathematically not defined at ζ1 ≡ 0° since the first term of Equation (27) is reduced to 0/0.
Finally, from ηeff, ζ2_eff, θdist_eff, and θprox_eff, the adjusted joint stress parameters, P0_eff, Pdist_eff, and Pprox_eff, are recalculated from Equations (23) and (7).
In rare, if not theoretical cases, if θdist > +π/2 (maximum θdist in the current dataset: 81°):
θ p r o x _ e f f = ζ 2 η e f f
θ d i s t _ e f f = ζ 1 _ e f f η e f f = + π / 2
As a result, we obtain two unknowns, namely ηeff and θprox_eff. However, relative to the ζ-angles, the two unknowns are ηeff and ζ1_eff.
Substituting
ζ 1 _ e f f = η e f f + π 2
into Equation (22) yields
cos 2 η e f f + π cos 2 ζ 2 sin 2 ζ 2 sin 2 η e f f + π + 2 η e f f + π 2 ζ 2 tan η e f f = 0
Solving Equation (33) numerically delivers the unknown variable ηeff (>−π/2) and, subsequently, from Equations (30) and (31), θprox_eff and θdist_eff.
Finally, from ηeff, ζ2_eff, θdist_eff, and θprox_eff, the adjusted joint stress parameters, P0_eff, Pdist_eff, and Pprox_eff, are recalculated from Equations (23) and (7).
(D)
Regression analysis
To assess how the morphological parameters influence the biomechanical parameters, multiple regression was applied to specific datasets.
When multiple regression is used to identify the unique (individual) and shared (combined) influence of two predictors (independent variables) on the response variable (dependent variable) rather than isolating the most influential predictor, it is necessary to determine whether multiple regression is warranted. This justification was rejected based on at least one of the following two criteria:
(a)
Negative shared component (B, squared semi-partial correlation coefficient; if B < 0, then there is no shared component [22]);
(b)
Variance inflation factor (VIF) greater than 5 [23]; VIF = 1/(1 − rmult2); rmult2 = A + B + C.
If a multiple regression was justified, the unique (A, C) and the shared (B) variances were calculated from
B = r1sing2 + r2sing2 − rmult2
A = r1sing2 − B
C = r2sing2 − B
where rsing2 and rmult2 are the coefficients of determination of single or multiple regressions, respectively.

3. Results

(A)
Morphological parameters
The position and extent of the navicular bone below the head of the middle phalanx (Figure 1) are defined by the angles α (proximal edge) and β (distal edge). The position angle μ of the navicular bone indicates whether the navicular bone is more proximal or distal in relation to the head of the middle phalanx, while the extension angle γ refers to the included angle of the articular surface (NMP joint, A in Figure 1) in relation to long or short navicular bones in the proximo-distal direction. The statistical details of the morphological parameters are listed in Table 2.
Since γ and μ are calculated directly from α and β, i.e., γ = βα and μ = (α + β)/2, the correlation of α and β with γ or μ leads to a multiple regression r2 of one, which means that a multiple regression is not justified (VIF = ∞). Single regressions (Figure 4a) of α and β with γ show that α influences γ in 55% (r2 = 0.5501, p < 0.0001), while β influences γ in only 3% (r2 = 0.0327, p = 0.0266). The reason for this result is that the range of β is smaller than that of α. Conversely, α and β show a comparable influence on μ in 93% (r2 = 0.9325, p < 0.0001) and 85% (r2 = 0.8548, p < 0.0001), respectively.
The proximal moment arm of the DDFT, p50/d, normalised to the distal one, explains the shape of the navicular bone. Long p50/d (≈1) occur in rectangular navicular bones, while short p50/d (≈0.8) occur in wedge-shaped navicular bones. The overall influence of α and β and γ and μ is 62% (multiple regression r2 = 0.6172; Figure 4b and Table 3). Notably, the unique influences of γ and β on p50/d are very small, 2.2% and 0.3%, respectively (Figure 4b and Table 3).
(B)
Biomechanical parameters.
The biomechanics of the navicular bone is characterised by the following variables:
(1)
The normalised magnitude of the joint forces FJ, FS, and FL;
(2)
The position of the COP.
Both parameters determine the articular surface stress, again characterised by the following variables:
(3)
The normalised magnitude of the peak stress vector;
(4)
The stress distribution (even or uneven).
The navicular bone is primarily loaded on two opposite sides:
-
At the NMP joint (A in Figure 1), by the force FJ (Figure 2);
-
At its underside, where the navicular bone is in contact with the deflected DDFT by the force FC (Figure 2).
Therefore, the navicular bone is compressed by these two forces. Furthermore, the navicular bone experiences forces on its distal side:
-
If p50/d > 1, then the distal impar ligament (tensile force FL) is under tension;
-
If p50/d < 1, then it is loaded with pronounced compressive force FS at the NDP joint (B in Figure 1).
The forces FL and FS amount to a maximum (worst case) of 6.4% and 36% of FJ, respectively. The force ratios of FL/FJ and FS/FJ correlate well with p50/d (r2 = 0.9505), with a regression equation of FL/FJFS/FJ ≈ 2 p50/d − 2.
The statistical details of all biomechanical parameters are listed in Table 4.
The influence of the morphological parameters, particularly γ, μ, and p50/d, on the biomechanical parameters is explained as follows:
(a)
Joint force FJ:
The influence of γ and p50/d on FJ was 15% (multiple regression r2 = 0.1465, p = 0.0001). The unique influences of γ and p50/d and the shared (squared semi-partial correlation) influence were 1.4%, 5.9%, and 7.4%, respectively (Figure 4c and Table 3). The influence of μ and p50/d on FJ was 37% (multiple regression r2 = 0.3672, p < 0.0001). The unique influences of μ and p50/d and the shared influence were 23.5%, 2.0%, and 11.2%, respectively (Figure 4c, Table 3). The strongest morphological influence on FJ came from the angle μ.
(b)
COP:
The influence of γ and p50/d on the COP was 32% (multiple regression r2 = 0.3232, p < 0.0001). The single regressions (squared partial correlations of the multiple regression) showed a difference in their coefficients of determination: γ with COP by a small r2 = 0.0395 (p = 0.0167) and p50/d with COP by a larger r2 = 0.3083 (p < 0.0001). The relatively small r2 of γ with COP (although still significant) led to small, unique influences of γ and p50/d and small, shared influence of 1.5%, 28.4%, and 2.5%, respectively (Figure 4d and Table 3). In this case, a multiple regression does not provide any more information than the single regressions.
The influence of μ and p50/d on the COP showed a strong influence of 79% (multiple regression r2 = 0.7865, p < 0.0001). The single regressions showed a striking discrepancy in their coefficients of determination: μ with COP by r2 = 0.0001 (p = 0.4439) and p50/d with COP by r2 = 0.3083 (p < 0.0001). This result raises the question of how single influences of 0% and 31% result in a multiple influence of 79%. The answer is readily apparent when consulting the unique influences of μ and p50/d and their shared influence of 48% (0.4782), 79% (0.7864), and −48% (−0.4781), respectively (Figure 4d and Table 3). The negative B-value indicates that there is no shared component. Compared to the previous example, where the unique and shared influences of γ were small, the result of this example is that unique and shared influences of μ were significant, of approximately +50% and −50%. However, due to their different signs, they cancel each other out. The single regression r2 of 0.0001, statistically insignificant with p = 0.4439, excludes multiple regression from the outset.
Of the three morphological parameters, γ, μ, and p50/d, the latter has the only serious influence on the COP (location of the COP within the joint surface) with 31%. The two angles, γ and μ, have no direct influence on the COP but rather an indirect influence via the p50/d, influencing the length of the moment arm p50/d with 62%.
(c)
Stress at the distal edge of the navicular bone (Pdist_eff):
The smaller the p50/d, the more the COP and, thus, the joint force vector FJ shift towards the distal edge of the navicular joint surface, and the larger is FS (Figure 2). When p50/d = 1 or p50/d = 0.8, the mean relative stress Pdist_eff at the distal border is 1 or 3.75, respectively.
The influence of γ and p50/d on Pdist_eff was 46% (multiple regression r2 = 0.4628, p < 0.0001). The corresponding unique influences of γ and p50/d and the shared influence were 1.2%, 25.5%, and 19.6%, respectively (Figure 4e and Table 3).
The influence of μ and p50/d on Pdist_eff was 59% (multiple regression r2 = 0.5880, p < 0.0001). The corresponding unique influences of μ and p50/d and the shared influence were 13.7%, 50.8%, and −5.7%, respectively (Figure 4e and Table 3). The fact that the shared influence is negative rules out multiple regression. The single regressions are interpreted as follows: μ with Pdist_eff by r2 = 0.0799 (p = 0.0011), and p50/d with Pdist_eff by r2 = 0.4511 (p < 0.0001). However, the single regression of γ with COP by r2 = 0.0395 (p = 0.0167) had a smaller r2 (12.8% of the other single regression r2) than μ with Pdist_eff by r2 = 0.0799 (17.7% of 0.4511). The strongest morphological influence on Pdist_eff came from the moment arm p50/d with 45%.
In addition to the influence of morphological parameters, the influence of FJ and COP on Pdist_eff can also be examined. The influence of both biomechanical parameters on Pdist_eff was 93% (multiple regression r2 = 0.9270, p < 0.0001). This means that VIF = 13.7, i.e., VIF > 5, which excludes a multiple regression. The single regression r2 of FJ and COP with Pdist_eff were 0.2574 (p < 0.0001) and 0.8030 (p < 0.0001), respectively (Figure 4f and Table 3). As expected, the location of the COP within the joint surface has a stronger influence on the magnitude of Pdist_eff.
The influences between morphological and biomechanical parameters are summarised in Figure 4g. If one excludes weak influences < 15%, FJ is only influenced by μ, and COP by p50/d (and indirectly by μ via p50/d). Missing strong influences are β on γ, γ on COP (only via p50/d), p50/d on FJ, μ on COP (only via p50/d), and γ on FJ.
The stress pole, where the stress P0 originates, should not be confused with the COP, the origin of FJ. While the COP is always located at the joint surface, P0 can move outside the joint surface and then become a virtual stress pole. In fact, P0 is located inside the joint surface only if the COP lies within a small window of 50% ± 2–3% (determined empirically, based on the processed data; Figure 5a), i.e., when θdist is positive and θprox is negative. P0 is outside the joint surface if both θ angles share the same sign, be it negative or positive. This means that P0 becomes virtual and, thus, is no longer relevant if it lies outside the articular surface. Consequently, Pdist and Pprox must be calculated to determine the peak pressure. We can, therefore, define three conditions for stress distributions:
-
P0 within the articular surface: peak pressure at P0, where θdist is positive, and θprox is negative;
-
P0 outside the articular surface on proximal side: peak pressure at Pprox, where both θdist and θprox are positive;
-
P0 outside the articular surface on distal side: peak pressure at Pdist, where both θdist and θprox are negative.
If P0 is at the proximal edge of the joint surface, then θprox = 0 and ζ2 = η. If P0 is at the distal edge of the joint surface, then θdist = 0 and ζ1 = η.
When simulating an average navicular bone with average values of α, β, λS, δ, sFS/d (Table 1), but with p50/d between 0.999 and 0.9, so that 34% < COP < 66% (regression equation: COP% ≈ −10/3 p50/d + 11/3), P0 is within the joint surface only when the COP is at 50% ± 2.45% (Figure 5b). The reason why p50/d was varied as opposed to the other constant parameters was that the COP was most strongly correlated with p50/d (Table 3).
If the joint force vector FJ is not exactly at COP = 50%, i.e., it does not correspond to P0, an asymmetrical load and stress distribution occurs on the joint surface (Figure 6). The position of the COP correlates well with the relative distal stress Pdist_eff at r2 = 0.8030 (Table 3). When COP is 50%, Pdist_eff is about 1. When COP is 80%, the relative distal stress Pdist_eff is about 3.75. In addition, with a COP > 66.67%, the proximal part of the joint surface is no longer required for loading (Figure 6, case A). The smaller the distal stress Pdist, the larger γ and μ (larger surface angle and more proximal position; Table 3 and Table 5). The more proximal the navicular bone (angle μ), the larger the included angle γ and the moment arm ratio p50/d, the smaller the joint forces and stresses, and the more uniform the stress distribution (Figure 6, Table 5).
Therefore, the mechanical ‘design’ strategy (Table 5) to avoid adverse loading of the navicular bone is as follows:
(1)
Increase p50;
(2)
Increase γ;
(3)
Both strategies 1 and 2 imply a reduction of μ (since both p50/d and γ are negatively correlated with μ) and, thereby, rotate the navicular bone in the proximal direction.

4. Discussion

The results of this study impressively show that variations in joint morphology have an influence on joint mechanics, especially on articular stress distribution.
The aim of this study was to identify mechanically ideal and unfavourable morphological parameters. The strength of this study is that it provides scientific evidence that the shape of the navicular bone has a critical influence on its loading pattern and stress distribution. Furthermore, this study provides an analytical method for calculating the stress distribution, even for cases where portions of an articular surface are unloaded, and the extent of the unloaded portion is unknown. The most important morphological influencing factors appear to be the position of the navicular bone (angle μ; Table 5 and Figure 7) and the included articular surface angle γ, as they influence the moment arm ratio p50/d (Figure 4). All three morphological parameters show a direct effect on the biomechanical parameters, namely the magnitude of the joint forces, the position of the COP, the magnitude of the peak pressure, and the pressure distribution. The adverse mechanical parameters are large, normalised joint forces and peak pressures, eccentric COP, and uneven pressure distribution (Table 5, Figure 7). The negative effect of uneven stress distribution becomes evident from Figure 6. Figure 6 (case D) represents uniform pressure distribution (the stress vectors are almost the same size with a slight central peak). Figure 6 (case A) shows extremely uneven loading (only the distal half of the articular surface is loaded). The latter loading case leads to an excessive stress peak at the distal edge of the articular surface and, thus, to overloading of this region. Such high stress is mechanically detrimental to both cartilage and bone.
The practical application of the method and the results described in this article is that the method is useful as an additional diagnostic tool when measuring the morphological parameters directly on the radiograph and applying the equations described in the Methods section. The results of this method can be conveniently included in any pre-purchase examination and can also be applied to the selection of breeding stock since the shape of the navicular bone appears to be hereditary [9]. The most important mechanical parameters to consider are the moment arm ratio p50/d of the DDFT and the position of the COP, which is highly correlated with the relative distal pressure Pdist. The COP should not be >67% (Figure 6), and an almost uniform pressure distribution can be seen when COP = 50 ± 3% (Figure 5).
The new findings from the present study are that the morphology of the navicular bone has a direct influence on its loading. A distally overloaded navicular bone is likely to be the trigger for navicular disease, as pathological changes also occur in the distal sector, namely abnormal fluid in the medullary cavity [24], a shift of the arterial supply from distal to proximal under increasing degrees of navicular disease [10,11] and shape changes to the distal nutritional foramina [12,25]. However, further research is needed to confirm such a hypothesis. The knowledge about morphological variations and their biomechanical implications appears even more important as breeding selection can prevent the hereditary transmission of unfavourable navicular bone morphology. The inheritance of navicular disease could be due to the fact that morphology is hereditary [9], which, in turn, affects the joint force and bone stress distribution.
Willemen et al. [26] and Wilson et al. [16] examined and calculated the joint force of the navicular bone. Wilson et al. [16] concluded that the compressive force exerted by the DDFT on the navicular bone is higher in the first 70% of the stance phase in horses with navicular disease. The methods of Willemen et al. [26] and Wilson et al. [16] are not sufficiently mechanically accurate because the free-body diagram (FBD) was not correctly isolated and because not all forces acting on the FBD were considered. It is a common flaw in FBDs involving the navicular bone that the moment arm of the DDFT is drawn from the rotation centre to the “palmar border” [16,26] of the navicular bone (Figure 8a). The line of action of the DDFT is, thus, defined as the tangent to the tendon at the point where the moment arm intersects the deflected tendon and wraps around the flexion surface at the palmar margin (Figure 8a). However, the correct action line of a tendon, muscle, or ligament is usually constructed at the boundary, where the FBD is separated from, or “cut out” of, the reference frame, which is the external world. Thus, the preferred moment arm p results from bisecting the DDFT on the proximal side of the navicular bone (Figure 8b) rather than halving the navicular bone itself (Figure 8a). The latter method must take into account bone stress (Figure 8a) acting on the distal half of the navicular bone, which is unknown in the first place and results in a four-force member FBD. Alternatively, the FBD of Figure 8a could be drawn without bisecting the navicular bone, but then the force exerted by the DDFT on the proximal half of the navicular bone must be taken into account since the DDFT was bisected at the centre of its curvature. As another alternative, the DDFT could be cut on the distal side of the navicular bone (thereby excluding the navicular bone from the FBD; Figure 8c), again resulting in a four-force member FBD, because the cut occurs at the level of the NDP joint. In contrast to that, the FBD of Figure 8b is a three-force member and allows the calculation of the FT when the ground reaction force is known. Subsequently, FS or FL is determined from the four-force member FBD of Figure 8d.
The nomenclature terms for two joints between the navicular bone on the one hand and the middle and distal phalanges on the other hand are not specified in the ‘Illustrated Veterinary Anatomical Nomenclature’ [27]. The reason for this is that these two joints are only small parts of the distal interphalangeal joint (DIP joint) with no medical significance (in contrast to the navicular bone itself). However, they have a biomechanical significance, as both joints carry and transmit loads. Therefore, the two joints need to be named anatomically. In analogy to the metacarpophalangeal joint (MCP joint), the joints between the navicular bone (os naviculare) and the distal phalanx (phalanx distalis) or the middle phalanx (phalanx media) should be referred to as the naviculo-distophalangeal joint (NDP joint, Figure 1) or the naviculo-mediophalangeal joint (NMP joint, Figure 1), respectively, as already mentioned in the Introduction. The terms distophalangeal and proximophalangeal are nevertheless found in the literature. Duffy et al. [28] used the term “distophalangeal joints” for the DIP joints. Yeung et al. [29] used the term “proximophalangeal joints” for the proximal interphalangeal (PIP) joints. Owen [30], on the other hand, used the term proximophalangeal as a synonym for metacarpal (…the two metacarpal or proximo-phalangeal bonesextend forward…) in Archeopteryx skeletons.
The limitations of this study are threefold:
(1)
The stress distribution across the articular surface was not modeled based on Hertzian stress because the joint surfaces are composed of hyaline cartilage, characterised by low elastic modulus and viscoelastic properties. In addition, a clearance between the corresponding joint surfaces, i.e., the difference in radii of curvature, was not considered either due to the above-mentioned properties and due to the lubrication with synovia, a viscous fluid.
(2)
There is no conclusive evidence available in the literature that increased stress on the navicular bone is the primary cause of navicular disease. There is some circumstantial evidence based on clinical studies. Wilson et al. [16] found that the force exerted on the navicular bone by the DDFT was twice as large in the diseased cohort as in the control group. The reason for this finding was unspecified heel pain that forced the pressure centre on the sole of the hoof into a cranial position to relieve the pain. The cranial position of the centre of pressure, in turn, increased the moment arm of the ground reaction force at the coffin joint and, therefore, also the force of the DDFT, thereby compressing the navicular bone more than usual. Analgesia of the palmar digital nerves reversed this mechanism, and the calculated force acting on the navicular bone decreased [31]. However, the cause of this pathobiomechanical mechanism of unloading the heel coupled with overloading of the navicular bone cannot logically and conclusively lie in a painful navicular disease. Accordingly, McGuigan and Wilson [31] correctly state that “this mechanism identifies navicular disease as a possible end point for a variety of heel related conditions.” However, the most important conclusion related to this mechanism is that in two horses with similarly overloaded navicular bones, as a result of relief from heel pain, the horse with a more wedge-shaped navicular bone is likely to experience greater stress on the articular surfaces and inside the navicular bone. Bentley et al. [13] found that navicular disease is associated with “high microcrack surface density”. Due to these circumstances, this study can only suggest that there is a higher risk of navicular disease if Pdist_eff is large, specifically in navicular bones with adverse morphology. This study, in turn, represents an appropriate method to initiate an expanded study of the cause of navicular disease by examining horses diagnosed with navicular disease based on radiological signs and/or significant lameness. The proposed method outlined in this study is independent of actual ground reaction forces (which are obviously smaller in the lame limb) since the forces of the model are normalised to the DDFT force. Caution is advised when it comes to the training load on a horse, as frequent overloading of the navicular bone, e.g., in gallopers or trotters, can theoretically lead to disease in the navicular bone despite ideal morphological conditions.
(3)
The multiple regressions calculated to examine the influence of morphological parameters on biomechanical parameters were performed with two predictors, even if the number of morphological parameters was three (γ, μ, and p50/d). Multiple regression with three predictors would be the method of choice, although the above-mentioned problems with negative shared variance with three predictors would be more complex, making interpretation difficult.

5. Conclusions

This research study sheds new light on the biomechanics of the navicular bone and offers a new aspect of it. The fact that the navicular bone has different shapes when viewed from the side [9] and that these shapes were apparently inherited from the horses’ parents (at least confirmed by stallion data [9]) is already known from the literature. It was not previously known from the literature that the shape of the navicular bone has a significant influence on the stress distribution on its articular surface. Regardless of other factors that lead to navicular disease, the shape of the navicular bone alone could be the deciding factor as to whether a horse is more or less susceptible to developing navicular disease.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

The data presented in this study are available on request from the author to any qualified researcher.

Conflicts of Interest

The author does not have any conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Navicular bone, iso-view, and medio-lateral radiograph (A: joint surface for the middle phalanx, B: joint surface for the hoof bone; I: proximal phalanx, II: middle phalanx, III: hoof (coffin) bone; arrow: navicular bone; DDFT: deep digital flexor tendon).
Figure 1. Navicular bone, iso-view, and medio-lateral radiograph (A: joint surface for the middle phalanx, B: joint surface for the hoof bone; I: proximal phalanx, II: middle phalanx, III: hoof (coffin) bone; arrow: navicular bone; DDFT: deep digital flexor tendon).
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Figure 2. FBD and moment arms (proximal p and distal d) of the navicular bone; top row: square-shaped navicular bone with pd (requires FL for moment equilibrium); bottom row: wedge-shaped navicular bone with p < d (requires FS for moment equilibrium); the symbols are explained in Table 1.
Figure 2. FBD and moment arms (proximal p and distal d) of the navicular bone; top row: square-shaped navicular bone with pd (requires FL for moment equilibrium); bottom row: wedge-shaped navicular bone with p < d (requires FS for moment equilibrium); the symbols are explained in Table 1.
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Figure 3. Coordinate system and angles of the navicular bone; “0%” = proximal border of the joint surface, “50%” = midpoint, “100%” = distal border; the x-axis is parallel to the sole surface of the hoof and points forward (cranial direction), the y-axis points upward (proximal); the symbols are explained in Table 1.
Figure 3. Coordinate system and angles of the navicular bone; “0%” = proximal border of the joint surface, “50%” = midpoint, “100%” = distal border; the x-axis is parallel to the sole surface of the hoof and points forward (cranial direction), the y-axis points upward (proximal); the symbols are explained in Table 1.
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Figure 4. Influences between morphological and biomechanical parameters; the symbols are explained in Table 1; prox = proximal; dist = distal; the width of the arrows corresponds to the strength of the influence; (a)interrelation of α, β, γ and μ; (b) influence of α, β, γ and μ on p50/d; (c) influence of γ, μ and p50/d on FJ; (d) influence of γ, μ and p50/d on COP%; (e) influence of γ, μ and p50/d on Pdist_eff; (f) influence of COP% and FJ on Pdist_eff; (g) summary of influences >15%.
Figure 4. Influences between morphological and biomechanical parameters; the symbols are explained in Table 1; prox = proximal; dist = distal; the width of the arrows corresponds to the strength of the influence; (a)interrelation of α, β, γ and μ; (b) influence of α, β, γ and μ on p50/d; (c) influence of γ, μ and p50/d on FJ; (d) influence of γ, μ and p50/d on COP%; (e) influence of γ, μ and p50/d on Pdist_eff; (f) influence of COP% and FJ on Pdist_eff; (g) summary of influences >15%.
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Figure 5. θdist, θprox, and η against COP (%); (a): calculated data from radiographs; (b): simulated data; the green area corresponds to the position of P0 within the joint surface.
Figure 5. θdist, θprox, and η against COP (%); (a): calculated data from radiographs; (b): simulated data; the green area corresponds to the position of P0 within the joint surface.
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Figure 6. Distal stress Pdist_eff versus p50/d; the isolines of the COP positions are indicated on the graph; four different stress distributions (A, B, C, D) are shown on the right side of the figure, corresponding to four data points on the graph; the 3 coloured zones (green, yellow, red) indicate acceptable, increased, and excessive stress, respectively.
Figure 6. Distal stress Pdist_eff versus p50/d; the isolines of the COP positions are indicated on the graph; four different stress distributions (A, B, C, D) are shown on the right side of the figure, corresponding to four data points on the graph; the 3 coloured zones (green, yellow, red) indicate acceptable, increased, and excessive stress, respectively.
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Figure 7. Navicular bones with different shapes ((a,b): square-shaped; (c,d): wedge-shaped) at different positions (angle μ, (a): proximal position, (c): distal position), and the corresponding free-body diagrams with stress distributions at the joint surface (NMP, naviculo-mediophalangeal joint).
Figure 7. Navicular bones with different shapes ((a,b): square-shaped; (c,d): wedge-shaped) at different positions (angle μ, (a): proximal position, (c): distal position), and the corresponding free-body diagrams with stress distributions at the joint surface (NMP, naviculo-mediophalangeal joint).
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Figure 8. Different free body diagrams; shaded bones are inside the FBD, contoured ones are outside; FA = ground reaction force (between foot strike and mid-stance), FB = bone stress inside the bisected navicular bone; note that the joint forces FJ in all 4 subfigures are not of the same magnitude and depend on the nature and corresponding force equilibrium of the FBD; (a): FBD when defining the line of action (Ttang) of the DDFT as the tangent to the tendon at the point where the moment arm intersects the curved DDFT, wrapped around the flexor surface at the palmar border, (b): hoof + navicula (r bone (Tprox: line of action of the DDFT), (c): isolated hoof bone (Tdist: line of action of the DDFT), (d): isolated navicular bone.
Figure 8. Different free body diagrams; shaded bones are inside the FBD, contoured ones are outside; FA = ground reaction force (between foot strike and mid-stance), FB = bone stress inside the bisected navicular bone; note that the joint forces FJ in all 4 subfigures are not of the same magnitude and depend on the nature and corresponding force equilibrium of the FBD; (a): FBD when defining the line of action (Ttang) of the DDFT as the tangent to the tendon at the point where the moment arm intersects the curved DDFT, wrapped around the flexor surface at the palmar border, (b): hoof + navicula (r bone (Tprox: line of action of the DDFT), (c): isolated hoof bone (Tdist: line of action of the DDFT), (d): isolated navicular bone.
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Table 1. Notation, abbreviations, and symbols.
Table 1. Notation, abbreviations, and symbols.
Symbol(s) Explanation
Abbreviations
NMPnaviculo-mediophalangeal joint
NDPnaviculo-distophalangeal
DDFTdeep digital flexor tendon
COPcentre of pressure (origin of joint forces or ground reaction forces); position of the COP on the joint surface of the navicular bone: 0% at the proximal border, 100% at the distal border
FBDfree body diagram
r, r2coefficients of correlation and determination
pprobability (p-value)
A, B, Ccomponents of multiple regression (B = squared semi-partial correlation; A + B and B + C = squared partial correlations)
Rradius
Wwidth
Coordinate system
xforward (cranial direction), parallel to the sole of the hoof
yupward (proximal direction), perpendicular to the sole of the hoof
Angles of the navicular bone measured with respect to the coordinate syste   m
αangle between the negative y-axis and the articular surface radius at the proximal border of the joint surface (α is negative)
βangle between the negative y-axis and the articular surface radius at the distal border (negative angle when β opens on the proximal side of the y-axis)
γincluded angle of the joint surface (between proximal and distal border); γ = β − α
μposition angle of the navicular bone; angle between the negative y-axis and the articular surface radius at the midpoint of the joint surface; μ = (α + β)/2 (μ is negative)
τangle between the negative x-axis and the DDFT proximal to the navicular bone
δangle between the positive x-axis and the DDFT distal to the navicular bone (negative when DDFT pointing upward towards phalanx III)
εincluded angle of the DDFT
λLangle between x-axis and a line perpendicular to the distal impar sesamoid ligament
λSangle between x-axis and the joint between navicular and hoof bone
Forces and pressure
FJmain joint force (acting from the middle phalanx towards the navicular bone; naviculo-mediophalangeal joint)
φangle between the negative y-axis and the joint force FJ (φ is negative because it lies on proximal side of y-axis)
FSadditional joint force from hoof bone to navicular bone (naviculo-distophalangeal joint)
FLforce of the distal impar ligament
FTforce of the DDFT
FCcompressive force of the navicular bone, resultant of distal and proximal FT
Psurface pressure on the navicular joint surface (contact stress between middle phalanx and the navicular bone)
P0maximal stress at the stress pole
Pdiststress at the distal border of the navicular bone
Pproxstress at the proximal border
Moment arms with respect to the rotation centre of the hoof joint
pmoment arm of the DDFT proximal to the navicular bone
p50p at τ = 50°
dmoment arm of the DDFT distal to the navicular bone
sFSmoment arm of FS
sFLmoment arm of FL
Angles measured with respect to FJ and its COP
ζ1angle between FJ and the articular surface radius at the distal border of the joint surface (ζ1 is positive, counter-clockwise)
ζ2angle between FJ and the articular surface radius at the proximal border (ζ2 is negative, clockwise)
ηangle between FJ and P0
Angles measured with respect to P0
θangle between the articular surface radius at any point on the joint surface and P0
θdistangle between P0 and the articular surface radius at the distal border
θproxangle between P0 and the articular surface radius at the proximal border
Table 2. Statistics of morphological parameters; the symbols are explained in Table 1 and Figure 3.
Table 2. Statistics of morphological parameters; the symbols are explained in Table 1 and Figure 3.
MeanStandard DeviationMinimumMaximumRange
p50/d0.9160.0510.8141.0400.226
sFS/d0.5900.0490.4580.7710.313
sFL/d0.8770.0170.8510.8980.047
λS (°)666.835185.534.5
λL (°)59.855.79517120
δ (°)4.115.54−91827
α (°)−42.397.58−63−20.542.5
β (°)−0.245.17−161026
γ (°)42.154.6929.55828.5
μ (°)−21.326.05−38−5.7532.25
Table 3. Multiple regressions (MR); symbols of variables are detailed in Table 1; A, B, C: components of multiple regression (B = squared semi-partial correlation; A + B and B + C = squared partial correlations; A and C: unique or individual influence of predictors a and c on the response variable; B: shared or combined influence of predictors a and c on the response variable); r2: coefficient of determination; p: p-value (probability); VIF: variance inflation factor; UX: fraction of the response variable not explained from the multiple regression; C1 and C2: criteria for justifying rejection of multiple regression (cf. Section 2, correlation analysis).
Table 3. Multiple regressions (MR); symbols of variables are detailed in Table 1; A, B, C: components of multiple regression (B = squared semi-partial correlation; A + B and B + C = squared partial correlations; A and C: unique or individual influence of predictors a and c on the response variable; B: shared or combined influence of predictors a and c on the response variable); r2: coefficient of determination; p: p-value (probability); VIF: variance inflation factor; UX: fraction of the response variable not explained from the multiple regression; C1 and C2: criteria for justifying rejection of multiple regression (cf. Section 2, correlation analysis).
MR 1MR 2MR 3MR 4MR 5MR 6MR 7MR 8MR 9
predictor aαγγμγμγμFJ
predictor cβμp50/dp50/dp50/dp50/dp50/dp50/dCOP%
response variablep50/dp50/dFJFJCOP%COP%Pdist_effPdist_effPdist_eff
A + B + C r20.61720.61720.14650.36720.32320.78650.46280.58800.9270
A + B + C p<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001
B + C r20.43130.59520.13260.13260.30830.30830.45110.45110.8030
B + C p<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001<0.0001
A + B r20.61390.29460.08790.34700.03950.00010.20770.07990.2574
A + B p<0.0001<0.00010.0007<0.00010.01670.4439<0.00010.0011<0.0001
VIF2.612.611.21.61.54.71.92.413.7
UX0.38280.38280.85350.63280.67680.21350.53720.4120.073
B0.42800.27260.07400.11240.0246−0.47810.1960−0.05700.1334
A0.18590.02200.01390.23460.01490.47820.01170.13690.1240
C0.00330.32260.05860.02020.28370.78640.25510.50810.6696
trend 1proximal β, long p50/dproximal μ, long p50/dshort p50/d, high FJshort p50/d, high FJshort p50/d, distal COPshort p50/d, distal COPshort p50/d, high Pdistshort p50/d, high Pdistdistal COP, high Pdist
trend 2proximal α, long p50/dwide γ, long p50/dsmall γ, high FJdistal μ, high FJsmall γ, distal COP----small γ, high Pdistdistal μ, high Pdisthigh FJ, high Pdist
MR justified: Y/NYYYYYNYNN
justifi-cation if N---------------C1---C1C2
Table 4. Statistics of mechanical parameters; the symbols are explained in Table 1.
Table 4. Statistics of mechanical parameters; the symbols are explained in Table 1.
MeanStandard DeviationMinimumMaximumRange
FJ/FT0.7890.1000.5641.0410.477
FS/FT−0.1620.071−0.341−0.0080.333
FL/FT0.0290.0140.0030.0460.043
φ (°)−16.656.83−33.58−2.1031.48
COP (%)61.268.8838.9783.5744.60
ηeff (°)45.0530.24−50.5174.67125.18
ζ1 (°)16.414.557.7230.5222.80
ζ2_eff (°)−23.873.91−33.38−13.8519.53
θdist_eff (°)−28.6534.01−66.9581.03147.98
θprox_eff (°)−68.9331.65−9031.03121.03
P0_eff2.942.030.9810.019.03
Pdist_eff1.870.830.274.103.83
Pprox_eff0.410.4401.941.94
γeff (°)40.286.6823.055834.95
Table 5. Ideal and adverse loading cases (c.f. Figure 6 and Figure 7).
Table 5. Ideal and adverse loading cases (c.f. Figure 6 and Figure 7).
VariablesIdeal Case Figure 7a,b)Adverse Case (Figure 7c,d)
morphological variablesinfluencing the biomechanical parameters
included joint surface angle γ (proximodistal extent)wide (>40°) (long)small (<40°) (short)
proximodistal position μproximal (>20°)distal (<20°)
shape factor p50/d0.9–1 (rectangular or trapezoid)<0.9 (cuneiform or wedged)
biomechanical variablesinfluenced by the morphological parameters
navicular joint force (FJ/FT)small (<0.75)large (>0.85)
force of navicular–hoof bone joint (FS/FT)0large (>0.2)
location of COP50% (central)>67% (distal)
pressure distributionevenuneven (distal stress peak)
Pdist_eff (Figure 6)moderate (~1)high (>2.5)
Pprox_eff (Figure 6)moderate (~1)0
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Fuss, F.K. Joint Stress Analysis of the Navicular Bone of the Horse and Its Implications for Navicular Disease. Bioengineering 2024, 11, 87. https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering11010087

AMA Style

Fuss FK. Joint Stress Analysis of the Navicular Bone of the Horse and Its Implications for Navicular Disease. Bioengineering. 2024; 11(1):87. https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering11010087

Chicago/Turabian Style

Fuss, Franz Konstantin. 2024. "Joint Stress Analysis of the Navicular Bone of the Horse and Its Implications for Navicular Disease" Bioengineering 11, no. 1: 87. https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering11010087

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