Theoretical mathematics, polarized light microscopy and computational models in healthy and pathological bone

被引:3
作者
Ascenzi, Maria-Grazia [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Orthopaed Surg, Rehabil Bldg,Room 22-69,1000 Vet Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
关键词
Biomechanics; Lamella; Low-trauma fracture; Mathematics; Osteon; Pathology; HUMAN SECONDARY OSTEONS; X-RAY-DIFFRACTION; CORTICAL BONE; COLLAGEN ORIENTATION; LAMELLAR BONE; COMPACT-BONE; OSTEOBLAST; DENSITY; DIFFERENTIATION; ORGANIZATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.bone.2020.115295
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
The needs of everyday life, such as counting and measuring, are roots of theoretical mathematics. I believe these roots are why mathematical ideas ground research so amazingly well within many scientific fields. Initially trained as a theoretical mathematician and having collaborated with non-mathematicians in the field of bone research, I address the advantages and challenges of collaborations across fields of research among investigators trained in different disciplines. I report on the mathematical ideas that have guided my research on the mechanics of bone tissue. I explain how the mathematical ideas of local vs. global properties influence my research. Polarized light microscopy (PLM) is a tool that I use consistently, in association with other microscopy techniques, to investigate bone in its healthy state and in the presence of bone disease, in humans and in animal models. I review the results that I and investigators around the world have obtained with PLM. Applied to thin bone sections, PLM yields extinct (black) and bright (white) signals that are interpreted in terms of the orientation of collagen type I, by means of other microscopy techniques. Collagen type I is an elementary component of bone tissue. Its orientation is important for the mechanical function of bone. Images obtained by PLM at a specific bone site yield big data sets regarding collagen orientation. Multiple data sets in respect of multiple sites are often needed for research because the bone tissue differs by location in response to the distinct forces acting on it. Mathematics, defined by philosophers as the theory of patterns, offers the backdrop for pattern identification in the big data sets regarding collagen orientation. I also discuss the computational aspect of the research, pursuant to which the patterns identified are incorporated in simulations of mechanical behaviors of bone. These mathematical ideas serve to understand the role of collagen orientation in bone fracture risk.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 93 条
[41]  
Boyde A., 1972, The biochemistry and physiology of bone, V2nd, P259
[42]  
Bromage Timothy G., 2003, Anatomical Record, V274B, P157, DOI 10.1002/ar.b.10031
[43]   MACROSCOPIC SHAPE OF, AND LAMELLAR DISTRIBUTION WITHIN, THE UPPER LIMB SHAFTS, ALLOWING INFERENCES ABOUT MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES [J].
CARANDO, S ;
PORTIGLIATTIBARBOS, M ;
ASCENZI, A ;
RIGGS, CM ;
BOYDE, A .
BONE, 1991, 12 (04) :265-269
[44]   ORIENTATION OF COLLAGEN IN HUMAN TIBIAL AND FIBULAR SHAFT AND POSSIBLE CORRELATION WITH MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES [J].
CARANDO, S ;
BARBOS, MP ;
ASCENZI, A ;
BOYDE, A .
BONE, 1989, 10 (02) :139-142
[45]   Hip and knee joint loading during vertical jumping and push jerking [J].
Cleather, Daniel J. ;
Goodwin, Jon E. ;
Bull, Anthony M. J. .
CLINICAL BIOMECHANICS, 2013, 28 (01) :98-103
[46]   During sideways falls proximal femur fractures initiate in the superolateral cortex: Evidence from high-speed video of simulated fractures [J].
de Bakker, Peter M. ;
Manske, Sarah L. ;
Ebacher, Vincent ;
Oxland, Thomas R. ;
Cripton, Peter A. ;
Guy, Pierre .
JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS, 2009, 42 (12) :1917-1925
[47]   LAMELLAR STRUCTURE OF OSTEONS DEMONSTRATED BY MICRORADIOGRAPHY [J].
ENGSTROM, A ;
ENGFELDT, B .
EXPERIENTIA, 1953, 9 (01) :19-19
[48]   Genome-wide meta-analysis identifies 56 bone mineral density loci and reveals 14 loci associated with risk of fracture [J].
Estrada, Karol ;
Styrkarsdottir, Unnur ;
Evangelou, Evangelos ;
Hsu, Yi-Hsiang ;
Duncan, Emma L. ;
Ntzani, Evangelia E. ;
Oei, Ling ;
Albagha, Omar M. E. ;
Amin, Najaf ;
Kemp, John P. ;
Koller, Daniel L. ;
Li, Guo ;
Liu, Ching-Ti ;
Minster, Ryan L. ;
Moayyeri, Alireza ;
Vandenput, Liesbeth ;
Willner, Dana ;
Xiao, Su-Mei ;
Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M. ;
Zheng, Hou-Feng ;
Alonso, Nerea ;
Eriksson, Joel ;
Kammerer, Candace M. ;
Kaptoge, Stephen K. ;
Leo, Paul J. ;
Thorleifsson, Gudmar ;
Wilson, Scott G. ;
Wilson, James F. ;
Aalto, Ville ;
Alen, Markku ;
Aragaki, Aaron K. ;
Aspelund, Thor ;
Center, Jacqueline R. ;
Dailiana, Zoe ;
Duggan, David J. ;
Garcia, Melissa ;
Garcia-Giralt, Natalia ;
Giroux, Sylvie ;
Hallmans, Goran ;
Hocking, Lynne J. ;
Husted, Lise Bjerre ;
Jameson, Karen A. ;
Khusainova, Rita ;
Kim, Ghi Su ;
Kooperberg, Charles ;
Koromila, Theodora ;
Kruk, Marcin ;
Laaksonen, Marika ;
Lacroix, Andrea Z. ;
Lee, Seung Hun .
NATURE GENETICS, 2012, 44 (05) :491-+
[49]  
FRANK ROBERT, 1955, ARHC ANAT MICROSC ET MORPHOL EXPTL, V44, P191
[50]  
Fratzl P, 1996, Connect Tissue Res, V34, P247, DOI 10.3109/03008209609005268