Chapter 39 Bone Biomechanics and Fracture Biology Flashcards

1
Q

Materials vs. composites vs. structures

A

A material may be composed of one or more elements
A composite is a material made from 2 or more primary materials
A structure may be composed with one or more materials or composites

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2
Q

Stress/strain vs load/deformation analysis

A

Load-deformation analysis is conducted on the body as a whole
Describes overall changes in geometry of the sample in response to an applied load

Stress-Strain analysis is conducted point-by-point within the body
Describes the materials response to loading

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3
Q

Difference between cancellous and cortical bone in load/deformation curve

A

Cortical bone = more dense, stiffer and stronger under compressive load
Structure and orientation of osteons make cortical bone resistance to deformation under axial compression
2% strain without failing
Becomes stronger and stiffer with higher strain rate

Cancellous bone = Can handle more strain
75% strain without failing

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4
Q

What are the 5 growth plate zones

A

Resting/reserve zone
Proliferative zone
Hypertrophy zone
Zone of calcification
Zone of ossification

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5
Q

Describe the resting/reserve zone of the growth plate

A

Only vascularized zone
Hyaline cartilage matrix with small chondrocytes – identical to hyaline cartilage

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6
Q

Describe the proliferative zone

A

Chondrocytes undergo mitosis
Align in longitudinal columns
Primarily type II collagen
Growth factors are in this zone

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7
Q

Describe hypertrophy zone

A

Chondrocytes hypertrophy and undergo apoptosis
Chondrocytes produce collagen X and decrease expression of type II collagen

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8
Q

Describe the zone of calcification and its result

A

Matrix mineralization
Chondrocytes release ALP and other enzymes that scavenge Ca and P
Result: Calcium=phosphate aggregates and matrix calcification

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9
Q

Describe the zone of ossification

A

Osteoblasts produce woven bone
Osteoclasts remodel woven bone to lamellar bone
Until activity within the zone of ossification > chondrocyte repopulation of the resting zone then no more growth plate

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10
Q

What is the force on the medial column of the femur during weight bearing

A

compressive

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11
Q

What forces are needed to generate an oblique fracture

A

oblique shear, transverse tensile, and compressive stress

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12
Q

Types of forces on transverse fracture

A

Concentric tensile loads
Oblique shear stress
Transverse compressive stress
Axial tensile stress

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13
Q

Types of forces on oblique fracture

A

Oblique shear stress - main
Concentric axial compressive loads
Transverse tensile stress

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14
Q

Types of forces on spiral fracture

A

Torsional load
Shear stress axially and transversely
Tensile stress
Compressive stress
Failure parallel to axis of the twist and propagates along tensile lines

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15
Q

Types of forces on butterfly segment and where would it fail

A

Bending moment
Induced by axial compressive loading = buckling
Compressive stress
Tensile stress
Failure on the tensile side

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16
Q

How does granulation tissue stabilize fracture

A

End result of inflammatory phase is a scaffold that remodels into granulation tissue to form external callus
Granulation tissue can withstand nearly 100% deformation - is primary stabilizer

17
Q

How to achieve primary/direct bone healing

A

Anatomical reconstruction
Strain has been eliminated
Absolute rigidity and stability

18
Q

How does primary/direct bone healing occur

A

Intermembranous ossification – osteoblasts and osteoclasts directly deposit bone at the fracture

19
Q

Describe contact healing

A

Gap is < 0.01mm
Interfragmentary strain <2%
Lamellar bone deposited parallel to long axis

20
Q

Describe gap healing

A

Gap < 1mm*
Interfragmentary strain <2%
Initially filled with fibrin matrix
Then remodeled with type I and type III collagen
Lamellar bone oriented transverse to the long axis

21
Q

How does interfragmentary strain decrease in secondary bone healing

A

Osteoclasts resorb bone at fracture leading to a wider fracture gap*
Widened gap decreases strain*
Granulation tissue can now form and survive within the gap
External callus forms on the abaxial surface of bone
Bigger callus = increase in area moment of inertia = greater stability

22
Q

How fast do osteoblasts get activated in bone injury

A

within 24 hours

23
Q

Define Wolff’s law

A

Ability of bone to remodel adaptively in response to mechanical load

24
Q

Describe elastic osteosynthesis

A

Hypothesis that distributing stress along the entire plate to limit stress at the screw-bone interface is more appropriate for juvenile patients
Best for animals < 5-6 months old
Compliance of bone-plate construct is increased to promote plate deformation within its elastic range to spare the weak bone-screw interface from overwhelming shear stresses

25
Q

How to achieve elastic osteosynthesis

A

Minimal manipulation of fracture
Bridging plate – metaphysis to metaphysis
2-3 screws at each end of the bone plate
Screws should be diverging and not tapped

26
Q

Define distraction osteogenesis

A

method of bone formation via intramembranous ossification

27
Q

What is the fibrous interzone in distraction osteogenesis

A

Radiolucent zone in the osteotomy gap where in response to tension, the gap is filled with collagen type I that is deposited in a longitudinal manner by fibroblasts and mesenchymal stem cells in response to linear tensioning of the provisional fibrin matrix

28
Q

What is platelet alpha granules role in bone healing

A

Hemorrhage and the resulting clot have activated platelets. Platelets are degranulated and platelet alpha granules release growth factors necessary for all wound healing especially bone healing. Alpha granules release IGF-1, PDGF, and TGF-beta which are osteopromotive (promotes de novo formation of bone).

29
Q

Describe disadvantages of collagen X in the hypertrophy cartilage zone

A

Collagen X – stiffer and prevents nutrient diffusion – leading to tissue hypoxia
Structurally the weakest and predisposed to Salter-Harris fractures