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Published byPrimrose Hill Modified over 9 years ago
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Bone Form and Function
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Forces Constrained by Newton’s Laws of Motion 1.“Law of inertia” – Body in motion (or at rest) tends to stay that way. 2.“F = Ma” – a force gives a body acceleration in the direction of the force (Bemis et al. 2004). That acceleration increases with the force and decreases with the Mass of the object. 3.“Equal and opposite” – an object receiving a force from another object, in turn, delivers an equal and opposite force.
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Center of Mass CoM = “center of gravity” – point about which a solid body is evenly balanced. To find the Center of Mass:
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Vectors and components of force Scalar quantities – values with magnitude and no direction –Examples: length, mass, temperature Vector quantities* - magnitude and direction –Examples: moving objects.
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Leg supporting the body Fb = downward and backward force Ground reaction force pushing back Fg = upward and forward force Fv = Fg sine(theta) Fh = Fg cosine(theta) Properties of the arrow drawings: direction and magnitude
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Corbin and Reilly, 1998 Reilly, 2000
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Amount of time foot on the ground decreases with increasing speed
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Bone juxtapositions constantly changing Hence, bones (and other materials) have to be able to respond to changing forces
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Stress and Strain Gravity acting on center of mass –Strong downward force: Feet Supporting skeletal elements Joint surfaces Contraction of muscles –Strong forces on attachment sites Biting or chewing –Muscular attachment sites Bones (jaws and skull) –Teeth (surrounding flesh and bone)
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Stress and Strain Stress – measured as pressure over cross-sectional area Strain – deformation in material caused by stress
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Compare elastic rubber band and rigid bone Stress-strain curve:
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Plastic region Stress (force/c.s. area) Strain (deformation) Elastic region Yield point fracture
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Connective tissues (revisited) Extracellular matrix / producing cells = High ECM –HOH, Proteins, Carbs. –Ex. “loose fibrous CT”, dense CT, Tendon, Ligament, Bone, etc. Morphology of CT: –Collagen/Elastin ratio –Arrangement of fibers dependent upon forces acting on the material.
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A – major components of Loose, fibrous CT B – Molecular structure of the material
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Arrangement of collagen fibers in dense CT A – dense irregular CT (dermis of skin) B – layers of a ligament C – cable-like arrangement of a tendon
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