» Articles » PMID: 25001204

The Effects of Misalignment During in Vivo Loading of Bone: Techniques to Detect the Proximity of Objects in Three-dimensional Models

Overview
Journal J Biomech
Specialty Physiology
Date 2014 Jul 9
PMID 25001204
Citations 7
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Theories of mechanical adaptation of bone suggest that mechanical loading causes bone formation at discrete locations within bone microstructure experiencing the greatest mechanical stress/strain. Experimental testing of such theories requires in vivo loading experiments and high-resolution finite element models to determine the distribution of mechanical stresses. Finite element models of in vivo loading experiments typically assume idealized boundary conditions with applied load perfectly oriented on the bone, however small misalignments in load orientation during an in vivo experiment are unavoidable, and potentially confound the ability of finite element models to predict locations of bone formation at the scale of micrometers. Here we demonstrate two different three-dimensional spatial correlation methods to determine the effects of misalignment in load orientation on the locations of high mechanical stress/strain in the rodent tail loading model. We find that, in cancellous bone, the locations of tissue with high stress are maintained under reasonable misalignments in load orientation (p<0.01). In cortical bone, however, angular misalignments in the dorsal direction can alter the locations of high mechanical stress, but the locations of tissue with high stress are maintained under other misalignments (p<0.01). We conclude that, when using finite element models of the rodent tail loading model, small misalignments in loading orientation do not affect the predicted locations of high mechanical stress within cancellous bone.

Citing Articles

The loading direction dramatically affects the mechanical properties of the mouse tibia.

Farage-OReilly S, Cheong V, Pickering E, Pivonka P, Bellantuono I, Kadirkamanathan V Front Bioeng Biotechnol. 2024; 12:1335955.

PMID: 38380263 PMC: 10877372. DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2024.1335955.


Estimation of load conditions and strain distribution for in vivo murine tibia compression loading using experimentally informed finite element models.

Pickering E, Silva M, Delisser P, Brodt M, Gu Y, Pivonka P J Biomech. 2020; 115:110140.

PMID: 33348259 PMC: 7856106. DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2020.110140.


Elevated Microdamage Spatially Correlates with Stress in Metastatic Vertebrae.

Atkins A, Burke M, Samiezadeh S, Akens M, Hardisty M, Whyne C Ann Biomed Eng. 2019; 47(4):980-989.

PMID: 30673956 DOI: 10.1007/s10439-018-02188-8.


Spatial relationship between bone formation and mechanical stimulus within cortical bone: Combining 3D fluorochrome mapping and poroelastic finite element modelling.

Carrieroa A, Pereirab A, Wilson A, Castagno S, Javaheri B, Pitsillides A Bone Rep. 2018; 8:72-80.

PMID: 29904646 PMC: 5997173. DOI: 10.1016/j.bonr.2018.02.003.


Material heterogeneity in cancellous bone promotes deformation recovery after mechanical failure.

Torres A, Matheny J, Keaveny T, Taylor D, Rimnac C, Hernandez C Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016; 113(11):2892-7.

PMID: 26929343 PMC: 4801312. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1520539113.