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Tissue viscoelasticity is related to tissue composition but may not fully predict the apparent-level viscoelasticity in human trabecular bone - An experimental and finite element study
- Source :
- Journal of biomechanics. 65
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Trabecular bone is viscoelastic under dynamic loading. However, it is unclear how tissue viscoelasticity controls viscoelasticity at the apparent-level. In this study, viscoelasticity of cylindrical human trabecular bone samples (n = 11, male, age 18–78 years) from 11 proximal femurs were characterized using dynamic and stress-relaxation testing at the apparent-level and with creep nanoindentation at the tissue-level. In addition, bone tissue elasticity was determined using scanning acoustic microscope (SAM). Tissue composition and collagen crosslinks were assessed using Raman micro-spectroscopy and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), respectively. Values of material parameters were obtained from finite element (FE) models by optimizing tissue-level creep and apparent-level stress-relaxation to experimental nanoindentation and unconfined compression testing values, respectively, utilizing the second order Prony series to depict viscoelasticity. FE simulations showed that tissue-level equilibrium elastic modulus (Eeq) increased with increasing crystallinity (r = 0.730, p = .011) while at the apparent-level it increased with increasing hydroxylysyl pyridinoline content (r = 0.718, p = .019). In addition, the normalized shear modulus g1 (r = −0.780, p = .005) decreased with increasing collagen ratio (amide III/CH2) at the tissue-level, but increased (r = 0.696, p = .025) with increasing collagen ratio at the apparent-level. No significant relations were found between the measured or simulated viscoelastic parameters at the tissue- and apparent-levels nor were the parameters related to tissue elasticity determined with SAM. However, only Eeq, g2 and relaxation time τ1 from simulated viscoelastic values were statistically different between tissue- and apparent-levels (p < .01). These findings indicate that bone tissue viscoelasticity is affected by tissue composition but may not fully predict the macroscale viscoelasticity in human trabecular bone.<br />final draft<br />peerReviewed
- Subjects :
- Trabecular bone
0301 basic medicine
Adult
Male
Materials science
Adolescent
0206 medical engineering
Finite Element Analysis
Biomedical Engineering
Biophysics
02 engineering and technology
Bone tissue
Scanning acoustic microscope
Models, Biological
Viscoelasticity
Shear modulus
03 medical and health sciences
Young Adult
Elastic Modulus
medicine
Humans
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
Computer Simulation
Femur
Elasticity (economics)
Finite element modeling
Elastic modulus
Aged
Viscosity
Rehabilitation
Nanoindentation
Middle Aged
020601 biomedical engineering
030104 developmental biology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Creep
Collagen crosslink
Cancellous Bone
Collagen
Composition
Biomedical engineering
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18732380
- Volume :
- 65
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of biomechanics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....bd6c974898ae70b3e6d5efa76e99b567