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Chapter 4 Tissue Biomechanics and Adaptation Modification of an organism or its parts that makes it more fit for existence under the conditions of its environment (Mish, 1984)
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In vitro, in situ or in vivo? n In vitro: in a glass (artificial environment) n Allow direct measurements n Invasive n In situ: in its normal place n some elements of the natural environment are preserve n Artificial testing n In vivo: done within the living body (ideal) n Difficult to obtain (invasive), few human models
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Testing Procedures n Same testing principles used for testing materials n Materials can be tested under: n compression n tension n torsion n bending n shear n Sample of material of known dimension is tested
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Load-deformation curve n Elastic region n Proportional limit (yield point) n Elastic limit n Plastic region n Ultimate strength n Energy stored
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Structural vs. material properties n Material properties are the characteristics of the material regardless of size, density etc. n The femur and phalange can have the same material properties but different structural properties (maximal load, bending stiffness)
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Geometry n Moment of Inertia n I=mr 2 n Example A: smaller moment of inertia, bending will occur n Example B: larger (I) greater cross- sectional more stiffness A B
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Bone geometry d= 2.0 d = 2.5 I II III Increase in stiffness without adding mass Why not solid bones?
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Mechanical properties of cortical bone n Anisotropic n Stiffness: calcium/porosity n Poisson ratio( ) n High: < 0.6 n Absorbs ME before fracture n Ductile: Allows deformation
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Cortical Bone Properties n Viscolelastic n Strain-rate sensitive n rate ultimate strength also n Fatigue: cyclic loads n Remodeling outpaced by damage microcracks develop, stress fractures n Microcracks: most likely to occur in the highly mineralized part of the bone
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Trabercular Bone n Mesh network: different densities and patterns n Nonlinear elastic modulus and strength n Marrow: Enhances Load bearing effect
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Bone Adaptation n Modeling: addition of new bone n different rates n continuos n any bone surface n growing years (fast) n initiation ? n Remodeling: resorption and formation of bone n Activation, resorption and formation n Osteoclast resorption n new bone (osteoblast) n Longer process n Initiated n functional strain n fatigue damage theory (Burr)
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Age n BMC: Bone mineral content n PHV: Peak height velocity (growth) n Period of bone weakness PHV and BMC n Maximal BMC 20-30 years
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Age n Men > BMC then women n cortical bone n 50’s decline in BMC n cortical same rate n women lose trabercular bone at a faster rate n rate after menopause (3%) n Importance of reaching high BMC during adolescence
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Osteoporosis n Reduction of bone mineral mass and changes in geometry leading to fractures (hip, spine, wrist) n Bone mass loss increases after menopause
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Nutrition n Mineral balance n vitamin D metabolites n parathyroid hormone n calcitonin n 99% of Calcium is found in the skeleton (1% in extracellular fluid) n Vitamin D n calcium absorption n sun exposure n Dietary protein helps control urinary calcium handling n deficiency calcium absorption, osteopenia n excess calcium loss causing imbalance n excess dietary fats calcium absorption
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Physical Activity n Exercise can stimulate bone growth n growing bone: low- moderate activity n threshold n Moderate-intense BMC (1-3%) in men and women n Intense activity 11% in tibia of young adults n Must continue exercise n depend of initial bone mass n Exercise related conditions n amenorrhea n oligomenorrhea n dietary restrictions n female triad n eating disorders n disrupted hormone levels n low BMC n Type of exercise n high intensity and impact
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Bone exercise
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Disuse n Immobilization, bed rest, space flight n Space flight: lack of loads n deposition n resorption n affect more weight bearing trabercular bones n Mostly reversible process: recovery is much slower n Early mobilization n fracture braces etc.
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Articular Cartilage n Type II collagen n Different fibers orientation n Shear forces n tensile resistance to swelling n Creep n constant load n compression load n Cyclic loading n Benefits vs. damage
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Articular Cartilage lubrication n Synovial joints n Low coefficients of friction.01-.04 n Theories of lubrication n Boundary n Fluid film n hydrodynamic (non deformable) n elastohydrodynamic n Squeeze Film n right angle movement n short duration molecules Fluid
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Articular Cartilage lubrication n Boosted Lubrication n combination of elastohydrodynamic and squeeze n AC is deformed matrix fluid is forced out in the space between the surfaces fluid viscosity Rigid Deformable
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Articular Cartilage: Permeability n How easy a fluid flows through a permeable membrane n Inversely proportional to frictional drag n High loads decreases permeability of AC
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Articular Cartilage: Adaptation n Active loading & unloading n Degenerative changes (OA) n Aging n water content n PG n collagen content
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Articular Cartilage: Use & Disuse n Exercise: swelling of AC, increase PG’s n Long term: wear & tear, degradation, OA n OA: cause ? n excessive loads n inferior biomaterials n Some Factors n heredity n chemical changes n altered joint mechanics (ACL- laxity) n obesity
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Articular Cartilage: Use & Disuse n Disuse n atrophy n reduction of synthesis n PG n fibrillation n mechanical properties n deforms rapidly n Changes are reversible Biological properties LackNonstrenuous Strenuous Control
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Tendon & Ligament n Ultimate tensile stress of tendon considerably high (50-100 MPa) n Viscoelastic behaviors n creep, stress-relaxation n strain rate sensitivity, different from bone n fast strain rate ligament injuries, slow rate (avulsion fracture) n Partial failure n Geometry
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Tendon & Ligament n Age n before maturity: more viscous & compliant n maturity: stiffness & modulus of elasticity n After middle age: viscosity, less compliant, weak insertions (avulsion fractures)
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Tendon & Ligament n Sensitive to training and disuse n Hypertrophy: increase in size and mechanical strength n Exercise can produce increases up to 20% in ligament strength n Increase in number of collagen fibrils and cross-sectional area of tendons, collagen synthesis n Disuse n deterioration of both mechanical and biochemical properties n strength, GAG, water, collagen synthesis, mass
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Skeletal Muscle n Force production n twitch n tetanus n depends on # cross-bridges n rate force: sarcomeres in series n High power output
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Skeletal Muscle: strains n Tears n bone tendon junctions n muscle belly n myotendinous junction n Contracting muscles required more force and energy to reach failure
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Skeletal Muscle Adaptation n # muscle fibers set at birth ? n Muscle length associated with addition of sarcomeres at myotendinous junction n Muscle adaptations in children strength no increase in size (neural factors) n Maximal strength 20-30 years n Plateau age 50 with a decline n Loss of strength # fibers, fast twitch n Gender: women 75% total cross-sectional are n Same relative strength
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Skeletal Muscle Adaptation n Hypertrophy vs. Hyperplasia n Neurological components n Specific demands n strength vs. endurance n Atrophy n immobilization n bed rest n sedentary life n weightlessness n Changes in fiber size n lower protein synthesis n increase degradation n Slow twitch fibers more affected
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