RT Journal Article T1 Impact of applying traction in indentation tests for estimating axial compressive parameters for computational modeling of sutured meniscal horns A1 Peña Trabalón, Alejandro A1 Prado-Novoa, María A1 de Roy, Luisa A1 Seitz, Andreas Martin A1 Moreno-Vegas, Salvador A1 Estébanez-Campos, María Belén A1 Pérez-Blanca, Ana K1 Meniscos - Fracturas - Tratamiento AB Currently, knee models often use meniscal horn material models based on pure compression indentation tests. The tissue has circumferential fibrils to withstand traction from the meniscal roots, besides tibiofemoral compression. This study explores whether incorporating fiber-directional traction in indentations improves meniscal horn modeling. To our knowledge, this is the first such analysis on fibril-reinforced biological tissue. Twenty-seven sutured human meniscal horns (65 ± 6 years old; 17 female, 10 male) were indented at 7 points each and subjected to 3 traction levels: unloaded, 10 and 20 N. Eighty-four FE models of one specimen simulated the 7 indentations under the 3 tensile levels, applying 4 different material models strategies derived from indentation outcomes of specific specimen unloaded, specific specimen at maximum traction, mean of 27 specimens unloaded and mean of 27 specimens at maximum traction. Indentations showed increases for both traction levels from the unloaded state in maximum force (p = 0.02 for 10 N; p = 0.007 for 20 N), instantaneous modulus (p = 0.002 for 10 N; p < 0.001 for 20 N) and relaxation modulus (p < 0.001 for 10 and 20 N). No differences were found between the loaded levels. FE models using properties from indentation tests under traction conditions similar to the simulated one provided more accurate predictions, being more precise when using specimen-specific data. Therefore, indentation outcomes of sutured meniscal horns are affected by fiber-directional traction. Simulations of combined stress states with axial compression and circumferential traction, over the toe-zone of the fiber-direction traction load-deformation curve, as occurs physiologically, are more accurate using material properties from traction-included rather than pure compression indentation tests. PB Springer Nature YR 2025 FD 2025 LK https://hdl.handle.net/10630/40287 UL https://hdl.handle.net/10630/40287 LA eng NO Peña-Trabalon, A., Prado-Novoa, M., de Roy, L., Seitz, A. M., Moreno-Vegas, S., Campos, M. B. E., & Perez-Blanca, A. (2026). Impact of applying traction in indentation tests for estimating axial compressive parameters for computational modeling of sutured meniscal horns. Acta Mechanica Sinica, 42(3), 624717. NO Universidad de Málaga NO Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades a través de programa FPU (FPU20/05445) DS RIUMA. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Málaga RD 19 ene 2026