Author
Weickenmeier, J
Fischer, C
Carter, D
Kuhl, E
Goriely, A
Journal title
Physical Review Letters
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevLett.118.248101
Volume
118
Last updated
2024-04-10T11:36:12.233+01:00
Page
248101-
Abstract
After birth, the skull grows and remodels in close synchrony with the brain to allow for an increase in intracranial volume. Increase in skull area is provided primarily by bone accretion at the sutures. Additional remodeling, to allow for a change in curvatures, occurs by resorption on the inner surface of the bone plates and accretion on their outer surfaces. When a suture fuses too early, normal skull growth is disrupted, leading to deformed final skull shape. The leading theory assumes that the main stimulus for skull growth is provided by mechanical stresses. Based on these ideas, we first discuss the dimensional, geometrical, and kinematics synchrony between brain, skull and suture growth. Second, we present two mechanical models for skull growth that account for growth at the sutures and explain the various observed dysmorphologies. These models demonstrate the particular role of physical and geometrical constraints taking place in skull growth.
Symplectic ID
696657
Favourite
Off
Publication type
Journal Article
Publication date
01 Jun 2017
Please contact us with feedback and comments about this page. Created on 22 May 2017 - 10:44.