Cartilage Flashcards

1
Q

Cartilage-Function

A

increases area of load distribution for joints; attenuates joint contact stress; provides a smooth, wear resistant bearing surface

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2
Q

Cartilagen-composition

A

chondrocytes (maintain organic component),

matrix (collagen type II with GAG; provide structural framework); the scaffolding

collagen fibrils and GAG provide tensile stiffness and strength and resists load

water/salts/glycoproteins; fluid dictates the biomechanical behavior

nearly frictionless b/wjoint surfaces and very limited capacity to repair

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3
Q

Cartilage-Mechanical Properties

A

high tensile stiffness/strength; cannot resist compression well; anisotropic and biphasic

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4
Q

Anisotropic

A

strong in one direction, but not in others; collagen fiber arrangements vary; densities vary throughout tissue; mechanical properties varying between directions/modes of loading

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5
Q

Bi-Phasic Material

A

composed of fluid that is incompressible and a solid is porous and permeable

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6
Q

Cartilage-Biomechanical Behavior

A

contact forces between joint surfaces is huge! this is because of the very small cross sectional area

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7
Q

Cartilage-Fluid Components

A

resists compression; centered toward the near articular surface;

permits exchange between chondrocytes and synovial fluid (gases, nutrients, waste products)

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8
Q

Water in Cartilage

A

fluid leaves and comes back into the capsule and is driven by an electrochemical gradient;

mechanical load creates pressure gradients;ex: sponge that is saturated but leaks when you apply pressure;

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9
Q

Creep in Cartilage

A

applied load balanced by resistive stress within the tissue; creep is caused by fluid leaking out under the load;

an equilibrium occurs when fluid and collagen are balanced

throughout the day, 50% of fluid may be lost until you shift/lay down to allow fluid to fill back up (take off the load)

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10
Q

Stress Relaxation in Articular Cartilage

A

initial increase in stress due to fluid exudation, then stress/relaxation during the displacement maintenance phase as fluid is redistributed

attenuates stress developed within the tissue;

the cartilage compresses, then redistributes the force

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11
Q

Proposed mechanisms for Failure of Articular Cartilage

A

tensile failure (solid gets damaged);

washout of PGs from extracellular matrix from constant inflow and outflow of fluid (causes PGs to disappear, decreasing stiffness)

rapid applications of high loads which don’t allow time for stress-relaxation

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12
Q

Fibrillation

A

splitting of cartilage surface; can extend through the full depth to the subchondralbone

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13
Q

Degeneration of Articular Cartilage

A

progressive deterioration of the tensile properties of solid matrix (cartilage then has too much water because there is more permeability; thus it can’t resist compression as well because there is more outflow of water under load)

as water content increases there is a decreased compressive stiffness

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14
Q

Osteoarthritis

A

increased fluid flow can lead to increased deformation and an increase in the ability to resist loading;

biomechanical changes at muscle/skeletal level may change loading profiles

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15
Q

Effects of Aging

A

progressive deterioration of the tensile properties of solid matrix; structural collagen matrix loosens

increased water content leading to decreased compression stiffness

may be influenced by content stresses magnitudes

accumulation of microtrauma, smaller and fewer GAG molecules, decreased tendon stiffness

Can be mitigated through physical activity and exercise

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16
Q

Process of Healing

A

inflammatory phase (1-10 days)

proliferation phase (3-30 days)

Maturation (remodeling) phase (3-360 days)