Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1646957 Materials Letters 2012 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

The extremely fine structure of vertebral cortex challenges reliable determination of the tissue's anisotropic elasticity, which is important for the spine's load carrying patterns often causing pain in patients. As a potential remedy, we here propose a combined experimental (ultrasonic) and modeling (micromechanics) approach. Longitudinal acoustic waves are sent in longitudinal (superior-inferior, axial) as well as transverse (circumferential) direction through millimeter-sized samples containing this vertebral cortex, and corresponding wave velocities agree very well with recently identified ‘universal’ compositional and acoustic characteristics (J Theor Biol 287:115, 2011), which are valid for a large data base comprising different bones from different species and different organs. This provides evidence that the ‘universal’ organization patterns inherent to all the bone tissues of the aforementioned data base also hold for vertebral bone. Consequently, an experimentally validated model covering the mechanical effects of this organization patterns (J Theor Biol 244:597, 2007, J Theor Biol 260:230, 2009) gives access to the complete elasticity tensor of human lumbar vertebral bone tissue, as a valuable input for structural analyses aiming at patient-specific fracture risk assessment, e.g. based on the Finite Element Method.

► Combined ultrasonics/micromechanics delivers full elasticity of vertebral bone tissue. ► Wave measurements reflect fluctuations in mineral content at the micrometer level. ► Experimental results confirm bone tissue as collagen-fibril-reinforced mineral foam.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Nanotechnology
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