Title of article :
Fluid pressure relaxation depends upon osteonal microstructure: modeling an oscillatory bending experiment
Author/Authors :
Liyun Wang، نويسنده , , Susannah P. Fritton، نويسنده , , Stephen C. Cowin، نويسنده , , Sheldon Weinbaum، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages :
10
From page :
663
To page :
672
Abstract :
When bone is mechanically loaded, bone fluid flow induces shear stresses on bone cells that have been proposed to be involved in boneʹs mechanosensory system. To investigate bone fluid flow and strain-generated potentials, several theoretical models have been proposed to mimic oscillatory four-point bending experiments performed on thin bone specimens. While these previous models assume that the bone fluid relaxes across the specimen thickness, we hypothesize that the bone fluid relaxes primarily through the vascular porosity (osteonal canals) instead and develop a new poroelastic model that integrates the microstructural details of the lacunar–canalicular porosity, osteonal canals, and the osteonal cement lines. Local fluid pressure profiles are obtained from the model, and we find two different fluid relaxation behaviors in the bone specimen, depending on its microstructure: one associated with the connected osteonal canal system, through which bone fluid relaxes to the nearby osteonal canals; and one associated with the thickness of a homogeneous porous bone specimen ( 1 mm in our model), through which bone fluid relaxes between the external surfaces of the bone specimen at relatively lower loading frequencies. Our results suggest that in osteonal bone specimens the fluid pressure response to cyclic loading is not sensitive to the permeability of the osteonal cement lines, while it is sensitive to the applied loading frequency. Our results also reveal that the fluid pressure gradients near the osteonal canals (and thus the fluid shear stresses acting on the nearby osteocytes) are significantly amplified at higher loading frequencies.
Keywords :
Osteon , Fluid #ow , Lacunar}canalicular porosity , Bone adaptation , Poroelasticity
Journal title :
Journal of Biomechanics
Serial Year :
1999
Journal title :
Journal of Biomechanics
Record number :
450868
Link To Document :
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