Time Evolution of Deformation in a Human Cartilage Under Cyclic Loading

被引:0
作者
Lihai Zhang
Saeed Miramini
David W. Smith
Bruce S. Gardiner
Alan J. Grodzinsky
机构
[1] The University of Melbourne,Department of Infrastructure Engineering
[2] The University of Western Australia,Faculty of Engineering, Computing and Mathematics
[3] Massachusetts Institute of Technology,Center for Biomedical Engineering and Departments of Biological Engineering, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and Mechanical Engineering
来源
Annals of Biomedical Engineering | 2015年 / 43卷
关键词
Cartilage; Aggrecan; Computational modelling; Large deformation; Exudation strain; Compressive stiffness; Permeability;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent imaging has revealed that in vivo contact deformations of human knee cartilage under physiological loadings are surprisingly large—typically on the order of 10%, but up to 20 or 30% of tibiofemora cartilage thickness depending on loading conditions. In this paper we develop a biphasic, large deformation, non-linear poroelastic model of cartilage that can accurately represent the time dependence and magnitude of cyclic cartilage deformations in vivo. The model takes into account cartilage tension–compression nonlinearity and a new constitutive relation in which the compressive stiffness and hydraulic permeability of the cartilage adjusts in response to the strain-dependent aggrecan concentration. The model predictions are validated using experimental test results on osteochondral plugs obtained from human cadavers. We find that model parameters can be optimised to give an excellent fit to the experimental data. Using typical hydraulic conductivity and stiffness parameters for healthy cartilage, we find that the experimentally observed transient and steady state tissue deformations under cyclic loading and unloading can be reproduced by the model. Steady state tissue deformations are shown to cycle between 10% (exudation strain) and 20% (total strain) in response to the cyclic test loads. At steady-state cyclic loading, the pore fluid exuded from the tissue is exactly equal to the pore fluid imbibed by the tissue during each load cycle.
引用
收藏
页码:1166 / 1177
页数:11
相关论文
共 207 条
[1]  
Ateshian GA(2004)The correspondence between equilibrium biphasic and triphasic material properties in mixture models of articular cartilage J. Biomech. 37 391-400
[2]  
Chahine NO(1995)Changes in proteoglycan synthesis of chondrocytes in articular cartilage are associated with the time-dependent changes in their mechanical environment J. Biomech. 28 1561-1569
[3]  
Basalo IM(2001)The relationship of the compressive modulus of articular cartilage with its deformation response to cyclic loading: does cartilage optimize its modulus so as to minimize the strains arising in it due to the prevalent loading regime? Rheumatology 40 274-284
[4]  
Hung CT(1998)Mechanical properties of the collagen network in human articular cartilage as measured by osmotic stress technique Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 351 207-219
[5]  
Bachrach NM(2000)Mechanical and physiochemical regulation of the action of insulin-like growth factor-i on articular cartilage Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 379 57-63
[6]  
Valhmu WB(1999)Confined and unconfined stress relaxation of cartilage: appropriateness of a transversely isotropic analysis J. Biomech. 32 1125-1130
[7]  
Stazzone E(1995)Mechanical compression modulates matrix biosynthesis in chondrocyte/agarose culture J. Cell Sci. 108 1497-1508
[8]  
Ratcliffe A(1999)Stimulation of aggrecan synthesis in cartilage explants by cyclic loading is localized to regions of high interstitial fluid flow Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 366 1-7
[9]  
Lai WM(2005)Direct measurement of osmotic pressure of glycosaminoglycan solutions by membrane osmometry at room temperature Biophys. J. 89 1543-1550
[10]  
Mow VC(1995)Conewise linear elastic materials J. Elast. 37 1-38