3,138 research outputs found
The mechanical properties of trabecular bone: Dependence on anatomic location and function
In 1961, Evans and King documented the mechanical properties of trabecular bone from multiple locations in the proximal human femur. Since this time, many investigators have cataloged the distribution of trabecular bone material properties from multiple locations within the human skeleton to include femur, tibia, humerus, radius, vertebral bodies, and iliac crest. The results of these studies have revealed tremendous variations in material properties and anisotropy. These variations have been attributed to functional remodeling as dictated by Wolff's Law. Both linear and power functions have been found to explain the relationship between trabecular bone density and material properties. Recent studies have re-emphasized the need to accurately quantify trabecular bone architecture proposing several algorithms capable of determining the anisotropy, connectivity and morphology of the bone. These past studies, as well as continuing work, have significantly increased the accuracy of analytical and experimental models investigating bone, and bone implant interfaces as well as enhanced our perspective towards understanding the factors which may influence bone formation or resorption.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/26998/1/0000565.pd
Microdamage repair and remodeling requires mechanical loading
Bone remodeling is necessary to avoid microdamage accumulation, which could lead to whole-bone failure. Previous studies have shown that this bone-repair mechanism is triggered by osteocyte apoptosis. Through the use of a rodent hindlimb suspension model and tibial four-point bending model, the effects of disuse on microdamage remodeling was examined. At day 0, male rats were assigned to one of three groups: weight bearing (WB), hindlimb suspension (HS), or hindlimb suspension with daily intermittent weight bearing following damage-inducing loading (HW). Within each group, the rats were further divided into subgroups corresponding to three sacrifice time points [day 14 (WB and HS only), day 18, or day 35]. At day 14, animals were anesthetized, and their left tibiae underwent cyclic four-point bending to produce fatigue-induced microdamage. At sacrifice, the tibiae were examined using 3D micro-computed tomography (µCT), flow cytometry, and histologic and immunohistochemical stains. The results indicate that only the WB and HW groups had a significant increase in intracortical TRAP-positive resorption pits following damage induction, which was paralleled by a significant decrease in microdamage over time in combination with a shift in the osteoclast lineage owing to a decrease in monocytes. These results demonstrate that osteocyte apoptosis may be insufficient for repair of microdamage without the stimulation provided through physiologic loading. In addition, this potentially could have clinical implications for the current therapeutic paradigm for treating stress fractures, where extended non-weight bearing is employed. © 2010 American Society for Bone and Mineral ResearchPeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/71374/1/91016_ftp.pd
Preservation of femoral bone thickness in middle age predicts survival in genetically heterogeneous mice
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87136/1/j.1474-9726.2011.00671.x.pd
A Group-Based Yule Model for Bipartite Author-Paper Networks
This paper presents a novel model for author-paper networks, which is based
on the assumption that authors are organized into groups and that, for each
research topic, the number of papers published by a group is based on a
success-breeds-success model. Collaboration between groups is modeled as random
invitations from a group to an outside member. To analyze the model, a number
of different metrics that can be obtained in author-paper networks were
extracted. A simulation example shows that this model can effectively mimic the
behavior of a real-world author-paper network, extracted from a collection of
900 journal papers in the field of complex networks.Comment: 13 pages (preprint format), 7 figure
A comparison of the fatigue behavior of human trabecular and cortical bone tissue
The fatigue properties of trabecular bone tissue (single trabeculae) and similarly sized cortical bone specimens from human tibia were experimentally determined on a microstructural level using four-point bending cyclic tests, and they were compared based on modulus, mineral density, and microstructural characteristics. The results showed that trabecular specimens had significantly lower moduli and lower fatigue strength than cortical specimens, despite their higher mineral density values. Fracture surface and microdamage analyses illustrated different fracture and damage patterns between trabecular and cortical bone tissue, depending upon their microstructural characteristics. Based on the results from mechanical tests and qualitative observations, a possible mechanical role of the cement lines in trabecular tissue microfracture was suggested.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/29712/1/0000046.pd
Phenotypic Differences in White-Tailed Deer Antlerogenic Progenitor Cells and Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Stromal Cells
Deer antlers are bony appendages that are annually cast and rapidly regrown in a seasonal process coupled to the reproductive cycle. Due to the uniqueness of this process among mammals, we reasoned that a fundamental characterization of antler progenitor cell behavior may provide insights that could lead to improved strategies for promoting bone repair. In this study, we investigated whether white-tailed deer antlerogenic progenitor cells (APC) conform to basic criteria defining mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC). In addition, we tested the effects of the artificial glucocorticoid dexamethasone (DEX) on osteogenic and chondrogenic differentiation as well as the degree of apoptosis during the latter. Comparisons were made to animal-matched marrow-derived MSC. APC and MSC generated similar numbers of colonies. APC cultures expanded less rapidly overall but experienced population recovery at later time points. In contrast to MSC, APC did not display adipogenic in vitro differentiation capacity. Under osteogenic culture conditions, APC and MSC exhibited different patterns of alkaline phosphatase activity over time. DEX increased APC alkaline phosphatase activity only initially but consistently led to decreased activity in MSC. APC and MSC in osteogenic culture underwent different time and DEX-dependent patterns of mineralization, yet APC and MSC achieved similar levels of mineral accrual in an ectopic ossicle model. During chondrogenic differentiation, APC exhibited high levels of apoptosis without a reduction in cell density. DEX decreased proteoglycan production and increased apoptosis in chondrogenic APC cultures but had the opposite effects in MSC. Our results suggest that APC and MSC proliferation and differentiation differ in their dependence on time, factors, and milieu. Antler tip APC may be more lineage-restricted osteo/chondroprogenitors with distinctly different responses to apoptotic and glucocorticoid stimuli.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/140228/1/ten.tea.2013.0420.pd
Maladaptation and the paradox of robustness in evolution
Background. Organisms use a variety of mechanisms to protect themselves
against perturbations. For example, repair mechanisms fix damage, feedback
loops keep homeostatic systems at their setpoints, and biochemical filters
distinguish signal from noise. Such buffering mechanisms are often discussed in
terms of robustness, which may be measured by reduced sensitivity of
performance to perturbations. Methodology/Principal Findings. I use a
mathematical model to analyze the evolutionary dynamics of robustness in order
to understand aspects of organismal design by natural selection. I focus on two
characters: one character performs an adaptive task; the other character
buffers the performance of the first character against perturbations. Increased
perturbations favor enhanced buffering and robustness, which in turn decreases
sensitivity and reduces the intensity of natural selection on the adaptive
character. Reduced selective pressure on the adaptive character often leads to
a less costly, lower performance trait. Conclusions/Significance. The paradox
of robustness arises from evolutionary dynamics: enhanced robustness causes an
evolutionary reduction in the adaptive performance of the target character,
leading to a degree of maladaptation compared to what could be achieved by
natural selection in the absence of robustness mechanisms. Over evolutionary
time, buffering traits may become layered on top of each other, while the
underlying adaptive traits become replaced by cheaper, lower performance
components. The paradox of robustness has widespread implications for
understanding organismal design
Comparison of Uncultured Marrow Mononuclear Cells and Culture-Expanded Mesenchymal Stem Cells in 3D Collagen-Chitosan Microbeads for Orthopedic Tissue Engineering
Stem cell-based therapies have shown promise in enhancing repair of bone and cartilage. Marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) are typically expanded in vitro to increase cell number, but this process is lengthy, costly, and there is a risk of contamination and altered cellular properties. Potential advantages of using fresh uncultured bone marrow mononuclear cells (BMMC) include heterotypic cell and paracrine interactions between MSC and other marrow-derived cells including hematopoietic, endothelial, and other progenitor cells. In the present study, we compared the osteogenic and chondrogenic potential of freshly isolated BMMC to that of cultured-expanded MSC, when encapsulated in three-dimensional (3D) collagen-chitosan microbeads. The effect of low and high oxygen tension on cell function and differentiation into orthopedic lineages was also examined. Freshly isolated rat BMMC (25?106 cells/mL, containing an estimated 5?104 MSC/mL) or purified and culture-expanded rat bone marrow-derived MSC (2?105 cells/mL) were added to a 65?35?wt% collagen-chitosan hydrogel mixture and fabricated into 3D microbeads by emulsification and thermal gelation. Microbeads were cultured in control MSC growth media in either 20% O2 (normoxia) or 5% O2 (hypoxia) for an initial 3 days, and then in control, osteogenic, or chondrogenic media for an additional 21 days. Microbead preparations were evaluated for viability, total DNA content, calcium deposition, and osteocalcin and sulfated glycosaminoglycan expression, and they were examined histologically. Hypoxia enhanced initial progenitor cell survival in fresh BMMC-microbeads, but it did not enhance osteogenic potential. Fresh uncultured BMMC-microbeads showed a similar degree of osteogenesis as culture-expanded MSC-microbeads, even though they initially contained only 1/10th the number of MSC. Chondrogenic differentiation was not strongly supported in any of the microbead formulations. This study demonstrates the microbead-based approach to culturing and delivering cells for tissue regeneration, and suggests that fresh BMMC may be an alternative to using culture-expanded MSC for bone tissue engineering.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/140225/1/ten.tea.2013.0151.pd
Causes and prevention--(i) biomechanics
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/26051/1/0000125.pd
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