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1.
Degradation of collagen network and proteoglycan (PG) macromolecules are signs of articular cartilage degeneration. These changes impair cartilage mechanical function. Effects of collagen degradation and PG depletion on the time-dependent mechanical behavior of cartilage are different. In this study, numerical analyses, which take the compression-tension nonlinearity of the tissue into account, were carried out using a fibril reinforced poroelastic finite element model. The study aimed at improving our understanding of the stress-relaxation behavior of normal and degenerated cartilage in unconfined compression. PG and collagen degradations were simulated by decreasing the Young's modulus of the drained porous (nonfibrillar) matrix and the fibril network, respectively. Numerical analyses were compared to results from experimental tests with chondroitinase ABC (PG depletion) or collagenase (collagen degradation) digested samples. Fibril reinforced poroelastic model predicted the experimental behavior of cartilage after chondroitinase ABC digestion by a major decrease of the drained porous matrix modulus (-64+/-28%) and a minor decrease of the fibril network modulus (-11+/-9%). After collagenase digestion, in contrast, the numerical analyses predicted the experimental behavior of cartilage by a major decrease of the fibril network modulus (-69+/-5%) and a decrease of the drained porous matrix modulus (-44+/-18%). The reduction of the drained porous matrix modulus after collagenase digestion was consistent with the microscopically observed secondary PG loss from the tissue. The present results indicate that the fibril reinforced poroelastic model is able to predict specifically characteristic alterations in the stress-relaxation behavior of cartilage after enzymatic modifications of the tissue. We conclude that the compression-tension nonlinearity of the tissue is needed to capture realistically the mechanical behavior of normal and degenerated articular cartilage.  相似文献   

2.
Suh JK  Youn I  Fu FH 《Journal of biomechanics》2001,34(10):1347-1353
A change in mechanical properties of articular cartilage would be considered one of the most reliable signs of cartilage degeneration. While an indentation method has the potential to measure the cartilage properties in vivo, an accurate measurement of cartilage thickness in situ is technically difficult. An ultrasound transducer has often been used to measure the cartilage thickness. However, its accuracy is limited by the lack of an accurate measurement of the ultrasound speed of cartilage, for the ultrasound speed varies according to the pathological conditions of the tissue. Therefore, the objective of this study is to develop an in situ calibration method of predicting the true ultrasound speed of cartilage and thus allow the ultrasound transducer to measure the thickness of the tissue with great accuracy. By simultaneously implementing an indentation testing protocol using the ultrasound transducer as an indenter, this method can also provide an indentation stiffness measurement of cartilage.The feasibility of the proposed method was examined using normal and proteoglycan-depleted cartilage specimens. It was found that the true ultrasound speed measured by the in situ calibration method was sensitive to the proteoglycan depletion (1735+/-35 m/s for normal, and 1598+/-28 m/s for proteoglycan-depleted cartilage), and that the measured cartilage thickness was consistently accurate regardless of the tissue condition. The measured indentation stiffness of articular cartilage was also sensitive to the tissue condition. Thus, this study demonstrates that the proposed ultrasonic indentation technique can be used to accurately identify the abnormality of articular cartilage in situ.  相似文献   

3.
Articular cartilage is a biological weight-bearing tissue covering the bony ends of articulating joints. Negatively charged proteoglycan (PG) in articular cartilage is one of the main factors that govern its compressive mechanical behavior and swelling phenomenon. PG is nonuniformly distributed throughout the depth direction, and its amount or distribution may change in the degenerated articular cartilage such as osteoarthritis. In this paper, we used a 50 MHz ultrasound system to study the depth-dependent strain of articular cartilage under the osmotic loading induced by the decrease of the bathing saline concentration. The swelling-induced strains under the osmotic loading were used to determine the layered material properties of articular cartilage based on a triphasic model of the free-swelling. Fourteen cylindrical cartilage-bone samples prepared from fresh normal bovine patellae were tested in situ in this study. A layered triphasic model was proposed to describe the depth distribution of the swelling strain for the cartilage and to determine its aggregate modulus H(a) at two different layers, within which H(a) was assumed to be linearly dependent on the depth. The results showed that H(a) was 3.0+/-3.2, 7.0+/-7.4, 24.5+/-11.1 MPa at the cartilage surface, layer interface, and deep region, respectively. They are significantly different (p<0.01). The layer interface located at 70%+/-20% of the overall thickness from the uncalcified-calcified cartilage interface. Parametric analysis demonstrated that the depth-dependent distribution of the water fraction had a significant effect on the modeling results but not the fixed charge density. This study showed that high-frequency ultrasound measurement together with triphasic modeling is practical for quantifying the layered mechanical properties of articular cartilage nondestructively and has the potential for providing useful information for the detection of the early signs of osteoarthritis.  相似文献   

4.

Post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) is a common disease, where the mechanical integrity of articular cartilage is compromised. PTOA can be a result of chondral defects formed due to injurious loading. One of the first changes around defects is proteoglycan depletion. Since there are no methods to restore injured cartilage fully back to its healthy state, preventing the onset and progression of the disease is advisable. However, this is problematic if the disease progression cannot be predicted. Thus, we developed an algorithm to predict proteoglycan loss of injured cartilage by decreasing the fixed charge density (FCD) concentration. We tested several mechanisms based on the local strains or stresses in the tissue for the FCD loss. By choosing the degeneration threshold suggested for inducing chondrocyte apoptosis and cartilage matrix damage, the algorithm driven by the maximum shear strain showed the most substantial FCD losses around the lesion. This is consistent with experimental findings in the literature. We also observed that by using coordinate system-independent strain measures and selecting the degeneration threshold in an ad hoc manner, all the resulting FCD distributions would appear qualitatively similar, i.e., the greatest FCD losses are found at the tissue adjacent to the lesion. The proposed strain-based FCD degeneration algorithm shows a great potential for predicting the progression of PTOA via biomechanical stimuli. This could allow identification of high-risk defects with an increased risk of PTOA progression.

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5.
Site-specific and depth-dependent properties of cartilage were implemented within a finite element (FE) model to determine if compositional or structural changes in the tissue could explain site-specific alterations of chondrocyte deformations due to cartilage loading in rabbit knee joints 3 days after a partial meniscectomy (PM). Depth-dependent proteoglycan (PG) content, collagen content and collagen orientation in the cartilage extracellular matrix (ECM), and PG content in the pericellular matrix (PCM) were assessed with microscopic and spectroscopic methods. Patellar, femoral groove and samples from both the lateral and medial compartments of the femoral condyle and tibial plateau were extracted from healthy controls and from the partial meniscectomy group. For both groups and each knee joint site, axisymmetric FE models with measured properties were generated. Experimental cartilage loading was applied in the simulations and chondrocyte volumes were compared to the experimental values. ECM and PCM PG loss occurred within the superficial cartilage layer in the PM group at all locations, except in the lateral tibial plateau. Collagen content and orientation were not significantly altered due to the PM. The FE simulations predicted similar chondrocyte volume changes and group differences as obtained experimentally. Loss of PCM fixed charge density (FCD) decreased cell volume loss, as observed in the medial femur and medial tibia, whereas loss of ECM FCD increased cell volume loss, as seen in the patella, femoral groove and lateral femur. The model outcome, cell volume change, was also sensitive to applied tissue geometry, collagen fibril orientation and loading conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Equilibrium response of articular cartilage to indentation loading is controlled by the thickness (h) and elastic properties (shear modulus, mu, and Poisson's ratio, nu) of the tissue. In this study, we characterized topographical variation of Poisson's ratio of the articular cartilage in the canine knee joint (N=6). Poisson's ratio was measured using a microscopic technique. In this technique, the shape change of the cartilage disk was visualized while the cartilage was immersed in physiological solution and compressed in unconfined geometry. After a constant 5% axial strain, the lateral strain was measured during stress relaxation. At equilibrium, the lateral-to-axial strain ratio indicates the Poisson's ratio of the tissue. Indentation (equilibrium) data from our prior study (Arokoski et al., 1994. International Journal of Sports Medicine 15, 254-260) was re-analyzed using the Poisson's ratio results at the test site to derive values for shear and aggregate moduli. The lowest Poisson's ratio (0.070+/-0.016) located at the patellar surface of femur (FPI) and the highest (0.236+/-0.026) at the medial tibial plateau (TMI). The stiffest cartilage was found at the patellar groove of femur (micro=0.964+/-0.189MPa, H(a)=2.084+/-0. 409MPa) and the softest at the tibial plateaus (micro=0.385+/-0. 062MPa, H(a)=1.113+/-0.141MPa). Comparison of the mechanical results and the biochemical composition of the tissue (Jurvelin et al., 1988. Engineering in Medicine 17, 157-162) at the matched sites of the canine knee joint indicated a negative correlation between the Poisson's ratio and collagen-to-PG content ratio. This is in harmony with our previous findings which suggested that, in unconfined compression, the degree of lateral expansion in different tissue zones is related to collagen-to-PG ratio of the zone.  相似文献   

7.
Preparations of small proteoglycans from bovine tendon, bone, and cartilage have been compared for sensitivity to various enzymes and reactivity with different polyclonal antibodies. Chondroitinase ABC digestion of all proteoglycans generated a core protein preparation that migrated similarly in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide electrophoresis as a doublet band with Mr approximately equal to 45,000. The small proteoglycans of cartilage were divided into two populations based upon electrophoretic migration of the intact molecules (Rosenberg, L. C., Choi, H. U., Tank, L-H., Johnson, T. L., Pal, S., Webber, C., Reiner, A., and Poole, A. R. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 6304-6313). The core preparations of tendon, bone, and the faster-migrating (PG II) proteoglycans of cartilage all interacted in Western blot/enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay analysis with polyclonal antibody raised against either the tendon or bone proteoglycans. The slower-migrating (PG I) proteoglycans of cartilage did not react with these antibodies. Digestion of the tendon small proteoglycan with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease released glycosaminoglycan chains from the molecule and generated a 40-kDa protein fragment that was resistant to further rapid degradation by the enzyme. This large digestion fragment was also prominent following V8 protease digestion of the faster-migrating (PG II) population of small cartilage proteoglycans, but not the small proteoglycan of bone. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the tendon (PG II) proteoglycan was determined. These observations provide additional evidence for heterogeneity among the chemically similar small proteoglycans from different tissues.  相似文献   

8.
Experiments on articular cartilage have shown nonlinear stress-strain curves under finite deformations as well as intrinsic viscous effects of the solid phase. The aim of this study was to propose a nonlinear biphasic viscohyperelastic model that combines the intrinsic viscous effects of the proteoglycan matrix with a nonlinear hyperelastic constitutive equation. The proposed equation satisfies objectivity and reduces for uniaxial loading to a solid type viscous model in which the actions of the springs are represented by the hyperelastic function proposed by Holmes and Mow [1990. J. Biomechanics 23, 1145-1156.]. Results of the model, that were efficiently implemented in an updated Lagrangian algorithm, were compared with experimental infinitesimal data reported by DiSilverstro and Suh [2001. J. Biomechanics 34, 519-525.] and showed acceptable fitting for the axial force (R(2)=0.991) and lateral displacement (R(2)=0.914) curves in unconfined compression as well as a good fitting of the axial indentation force curve (R(2)=0.982). In addition, the model showed an excellent fitting of finite-deformation confined compression stress relaxation data reported by Ateshian et al. [1997. J. Biomechanics 30, 1157-1164.] and Huang et al. [2005. J. Biomechanics 38, 799-809.] (R(2)=0.993 and R(2)=0.995, respectively). The constitutive equation may be used to represent the mechanical behavior of the proteoglycan matrix in a fiber reinforced model of articular cartilage.  相似文献   

9.
We evaluated whether the use of cartilage thickness measurement would improve the ability of the arthroscopic indentation technique to estimate the intrinsic stiffness of articular cartilage. First, cartilage thickness and ultrasound reflection from the surface of bovine humeral head were registered in situ using a high-frequency ultrasound probe. Subsequently, cartilage was indented in situ at the sites of the ultrasound measurements using arthroscopic instruments with plane-ended and spherical-ended indenters. Finally, full-thickness cartilage disks (n=30) were extracted from the indented sites (thickness=799-1654microm) and the equilibrium Young's modulus was determined with a material testing device in unconfined compression geometry. We applied analytical and numerical indentation models for the theoretical correction of experimental indentation measurements. An aspect-ratio (the ratio of indenter radius to cartilage thickness) correction improved the correlation of the indenter force with the equilibrium Young's modulus from r(2)=0.488 to r(2)=0.642-0.648 (n=30) for the plane-ended indenter (diameter=1.000mm, height=0.300mm) and from r(2)=0.654 to r(2)=0.684-0.692 (n=30) for the spherical-ended indenter (diameter=0.500mm, height=0.100mm), depending on the indentation model used for the correction. The linear correlation between the ultrasound reflection and the Young's modulus was r(2)=0.400 (n=30). These results suggest that with large indenters, knowledge of the cartilage thickness improves the reliability of the indentation measurements, especially in pathological situations where cartilage thickness may be significantly lower than normal. Ultrasound measurements also provide diagnostically important information about cartilage thickness as well as knowledge of the integrity of the superficial zone of cartilage.  相似文献   

10.
Low molecular mass proteoglycans (PG) were isolated from human articular cartilage and from pig laryngeal cartilage, which contained protein cores of similar size (Mr 40-44 kDa). However, the PG from human articular cartilage contained dermatan sulphate (DS) chains (50% chondroitinase AC resistant), whereas chains from pig laryngeal PG were longer and contained only chondroitin sulphate (CS). Disaccharide analysis after chondroitinase ABC digestion showed that the human DS-PG contained more 6-sulphated residues (34%) than the pig CS-PG (6%) and both contained fewer 6-sulphated residues than the corresponding high Mr aggregating CS-PGs from these tissues (86% and 20% from human and pig respectively). Cross-reaction of both proteoglycans with antibodies to bovine bone and skin DS-PG-II and human fibroblasts DS-PG suggested that the isolated proteoglycans were the humans DS-PG-II and pigs CS-PG-II homologues of the cloned and sequenced bovine proteoglycan. Polyclonal antibodies raised against the pig CS-PG-II were shown to cross-react with human DS-PG-II. SDS/polyacrylamide-gel analysis and immunoblotting of pig and human cartilage extracts showed that some free core protein was present in the tissues in addition to the intact proteoglycan. The antibodies were used in a competitive radioimmunoassay to determine the content of this low Mr proteoglycan in human cartilage extracts. Analysis of samples from 5-80 year-old humans showed highest content (approximately 4 mg/g wet wt.) in those from 15-25 year-olds and lower content (approximately 1 mg/g wet wt.) in older tissue (greater than 55 years). These changes in content may be related to the deposition and maintenance of the collagen fibre network with which this class of small proteoglycan has been shown to interact.  相似文献   

11.
Proteoglycan aggregate is a major component of the extracellular matrix in articular cartilage and is considered to be responsible for the resistance to compression of this tissue. The reduced stiffness of articular cartilage due to the loss of proteoglycan aggregate has been reported in osteoarthritis. In order to understand the mechanical properties of extracellular matrix in articular cartilage at molecular level, the compressive properties of 36 single molecules of proteoglycan aggregate were directly measured using a laser tweezers/interferometer system. The proteoglycan aggregates showed resistance when compressed to approximately 30% of their contour length. The stiffness of proteoglycan aggregates increased non-linearly from 2.6+/-3.8 pN/microm (compressed to 30-35% of their contour length) to 115.5+/-30.9 pN/microm (compressed to 2.5-5% of their contour length).  相似文献   

12.
Articular cartilage exhibits complex mechanical properties such as anisotropy, inhomogeneity and tension-compression nonlinearity. This study proposes and demonstrates that the application of compressive loading in the presence of osmotic swelling can be used to acquire a spectrum of incremental cartilage moduli (EYi) and Poisson's ratios (upsilon ij) from tension to compression. Furthermore, the anisotropy of the tissue can be characterized in both tension and compression by conducting these experiments along three mutually perpendicular loading directions: parallel to split-line (1-direction), perpendicular to split-line (2-direction) and along the depth direction (3-direction, perpendicular to articular surface), accounting for tissue inhomogeneity between the surface and deep layers in the latter direction. Tensile moduli were found to be strain-dependent while compressive moduli were nearly constant. The peak tensile (+) Young's moduli in 0.15M NaCl were E+Y1=3.1+/-2.3, E+Y2=1.3+/-0.3, E+Y3(Surface)=0.65+/-0.29 and E+Y3(Deep)=2.1+/-1.2 MPa. The corresponding compressive (-) Young's moduli were E-Y1=0.23+/-0.07, E-Y2=0.22+/-0.07, E-Y3(Surface)=0.18+/-0.07 and E-Y3(Deep)=0.35+/-0.11 MPa. Peak tensile Poisson's ratios were upsilon+12=0.22+/-0.06, upsilon+21=0.13+/-0.07, upsilon+31(Surface)=0.10+/-0.03 and upsilon+31(Deep)=0.20+/-0.05 while compressive Poisson's ratios were upsilon-12=0.027+/-0.012, upsilon-21=0.017+/-0.07, upsilon-31(Surface)=0.034+/-0.009 and upsilon-31(Deep)=0.065+/-0.024. Similar measurements were also performed at 0.015 M and 2 M NaCl, showing strong variations with ionic strength. Results indicate that (a) a smooth transition occurs in the stress-strain and modulus-strain responses between the tensile and compressive regimes, and (b) cartilage exhibits orthotropic symmetry within the framework of tension-compression nonlinearity. The strain-softening behavior of cartilage (the initial decrease in EYi with increasing compressive strain) can be interpreted in the context of osmotic swelling and tension-compression nonlinearity.  相似文献   

13.
Articular-cartilage proteoglycans in aging and osteoarthritis.   总被引:10,自引:5,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
The composition of macroscopically normal hip articular cartilage obtained from dogs of various ages was studied. Pieces of cartilage with signs of degeneration were studied separately. In normal aging, the extraction yield of proteoglycans decreased; the keratan sulphate content of extracted proteoglycans increased and the chondroitin sulphate content decreased. The extracted proteoglycans were smaller in the older cartilage, mainly owing to a decrease in the chondroitin sulphate-rich region of the proteoglycan monomers. The hyaluronic acid-binding region and the keratan sulphaterich region were increased and the molar concentration of proteoglycan probably increase with increasing age. The degenerated cartilage had higher water content and the proteoglycans, as well as other tissue components, gave higher yields. The proteoglycan monomers from the degenerated cartilage were smaller than those from normal cartilage of the same age, and hence had a smaller chondroitin sulphate-rich region and some of the molecules also appeared to lack the hyaluronic acid-binding region. Increased proteolytic activity may be involved in the process of cartilage degeneration.  相似文献   

14.
The ultrastructure of embryonic chick cartilage proteoglycan core protein was investigated by electron microscopy of specimens prepared by low angle shadowing. The molecular images demonstrated a morphological substructural arrangement of three globular and two linear regions within each core protein. The internal globular region (G2) was separated from two terminally located globular regions (G1 and G3) by two elongated strands with lengths of 21 +/- 3 nm (E1) and 105 +/- 22 nm (E2). The two N-terminal globular regions, separated by the 21-nm segment, were consistently visualized in well spread molecules and showed little variation in the length of the linear segment connecting them. The E2 segment, however, was quite variable in length, and the C-terminal globular region (G3) was detected in only 53% of the molecules. The G1, G2, and G3 regions in chick core protein were 10.1 +/- 1.7 nm, 9.7 +/- 1.3 nm, and 8.3 +/- 1.3 nm in diameter, respectively. These results are similar to those described previously for proteoglycan core proteins isolated from rat chondrosarcoma, bovine nasal cartilage, and pig laryngeal cartilage (Paulsson, M., Morgelin, M., Wiedemann, H., Beardmore-Gray, M., Dunham, D., Hardingham, T., Heinegard, D., Timpl, R., and Engel, J. (1987) Biochem. J. 245, 763-772). However, a significant difference was detected between the length of the elongated strand (E2) of core proteins isolated from chick cartilage, E2 length = 105 +/- 22 nm, compared to bovine nasal cartilage, E2 length = 260 +/- 39 nm. The epitope of the proteoglycan core protein-specific monoclonal antibody, S103L, was visualized by electron microscopy, and the distance from the core protein N terminus to the S103L binding site was measured. The S103L binding site was localized to the E2 region, 111 +/- 20 nm from the G1 (N terminus) domain and 34 nm from the G3 (C terminus) domain. cDNA clones selected from an expression vector library of chicken cartilage mRNA also show this epitope to be located near the C-terminal region (R. C. Krueger, T. A. Fields, J. Mensch, and B. Schwartz (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 12088-12097).  相似文献   

15.
Dissected embryonic chick limbs release neutral metalloproteinases during endochondral bone development. These enzymes degrade cartilage proteoglycan and gelatin in culture medium. We found the enzymes active in the medium conditioned by explants of the region adjacent to the bone marrow cavity (cavity-surround). These enzymes degrade proteoglycan (PG) and/or gelatin. These spontaneously active enzymes are resistant to serum and tissue proteinase inhibitors, alpha 2-macroglobulin, and cartilage metalloproteinase inhibitor (TIMP). The other enzymes secreted from tarsus and bone marrow explants are mostly latent in the culture medium. Activated tarsus enzymes (PG degrading and gelatinolytic) are blocked by the above inhibitors. Activated marrow enzyme does not degrade PG but is resistant to those inhibitors. Cavity-surround enzymes may play an important role in embryonic osteogenesis of long bones because of their resistance to tissue and serum inhibitors. The in vivo mechanisms by which cavity-surround enzymes are activated are yet to be determined.  相似文献   

16.
The main objective of this study is to determine the nature of electric fields inside articular cartilage while accounting for the effects of both streaming potential and diffusion potential. Specifically, we solve two tissue mechano-electrochemical problems using the triphasic theories developed by Lai et al. (1991, ASME J. Biomech Eng., 113, pp. 245-258) and Gu et al. (1998, ASME J. Biomech. Eng., 120, pp. 169-180) (1) the steady one-dimensional permeation problem; and (2) the transient one-dimensional ramped-displacement, confined-compression, stress-relaxation problem (both in an open circuit condition) so as to be able to calculate the compressive strain, the electric potential, and the fixed charged density (FCD) inside cartilage. Our calculations show that in these two technically important problems, the diffusion potential effects compete against the flow-induced kinetic effects (streaming potential) for dominance of the electric potential inside the tissue. For softer tissues of similar FCD (i.e., lower aggregate modulus), the diffusion potential effects are enhanced when the tissue is being compressed (i.e., increasing its FCD in a nonuniform manner) either by direct compression or by drag-induced compaction; indeed, the diffusion potential effect may dominate over the streaming potential effect. The polarity of the electric potential field is in the same direction of interstitial fluid flow when streaming potential dominates, and in the opposite direction of fluid flow when diffusion potential dominates. For physiologically realistic articular cartilage material parameters, the polarity of electric potential across the tissue on the outside (surface to surface) may be opposite to the polarity across the tissue on the inside (surface to surface). Since the electromechanical signals that chondrocytes perceive in situ are the stresses, strains, pressures and the electric field generated inside the extracellular matrix when the tissue is deformed, the results from this study offer new challenges for the understanding of possible mechanisms that control chondrocyte biosyntheses.  相似文献   

17.
Proteoglycans of developing bone   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
We purified and characterized the bone proteoglycans from fetal calves, growing rats, and human fetuses. The major proteoglycan is part of the mineralized tissue matrix and only 10-20% can be extracted prior to demineralization. This bone proteoglycan is a small glycoconjugate (Mr = 80,000-120,000) containing approximately 20-30% protein and either one or two chondroitin sulfate chains (Mr = 40,000) attached to a relatively monodisperse protein core (Mr = 38,000). "O"-linked and "N"-linked oligosaccharide units are also present. Antibodies directed against the protein core of calf bone proteoglycan do not cross-react with cartilage, skin, corneal, or basement membrane proteoglycans in immunoassays and have minimal cross-reactivity with scleral proteoglycans. Quantitative immunoassays and indirect immunofluorescence were used to show that the molecule is localized to forming bone trabeculae and dentin, but not to any other tissue. Osteoblasts and osteoprogenitor cells adjacent to areas undergoing rapid osteogenesis also contain this small proteoglycan. A second proteoglycan (Mr approximately equal to 1,000,000) was extracted from newly forming bone prior to demineralization. This large proteoglycan, which was isolated from the cartilage-free areas of developing intramembranous bone, has a protein core similar to that of the cartilage aggregating proteoglycan and cross-reacts with antisera raised against these cartilage proteoglycans but not with the small mineral-entrapped proteoglycan. It contains larger (Mr = 40,000) and fewer chondroitin sulfate chains than its cartilage-derived analogue, and is localized to the soft connective tissue mesenchyme lying between growing bone trabeculae. More fully formed compact bone did not contain detectable quantities of this proteoglycan.  相似文献   

18.
Experimental determination of intra-tissue deformation during clinically applicable rapid indentation testing would be useful for understanding indentation biomechanics and for designing safe indentation probes and protocols. The objectives of this study were to perform two-dimensional (2-D) indentation tests, using indenters and protocols that are analogous to those in clinically oriented probes, of normal adult-human articular cartilage in order to determine: (1) intra-tissue strain maps and regions of high strain magnitude, and (2) the effects on strain of indenter geometry (rectangular prismatic and cylindrical) and indentation depth (40-190 microm). Epifluorescence microscopy of samples undergoing indentation and subsequent video image correlation analysis allowed determination of strain maps. Regions of peak strain were near the "edges" of indenter contact with the cartilage surface, and the strain magnitude in these regions ranged from approximately 0.05 to approximately 0.30 in compression and shear, a range with known biological consequences. With increasing indentation displacement, strain magnitudes generally increased in all regions of the tissue. Compared to indentation using a rectangular prismatic tip, indentation with a cylindrical tip resulted in slightly higher peak strain magnitudes while influencing a smaller region of cartilage. These results may be used to refine clinical indenters and indentation protocols.  相似文献   

19.
The cartilage matrix deficiency (cmd/cmd) mouse fails to synthesize the core protein of cartilage-characteristic proteoglycan (cartilage PG). Chondrocytes from the cmd/cmd cartilage cultured in vitro produced nodules with greatly reduced extracellular matrix. Immunofluorescence staining revealed that the nodules of mutant cells differed from the normal in lacking cartilage PG and in uneven and reduced deposition of type II collagen. Exogenously added cartilage PG prepared from either normal mouse cartilage or Swarm rat chondrosarcoma to the culture medium was incorporated exclusively into the extracellular matrices of the nodules, with a concurrent correction of the abnormal distribution pattern of type II collagen. The incorporation of cartilage PG into the matrix was disturbed by hyaluronic acid or decasaccharide derived therefrom, suggesting that the incorporation process involves the interaction of added proteoglycan with hyaluronic acid. Both the hyaluronic acid-binding region and the protein-enriched core molecule prepared from rat chondrosarcoma cartilage PG could also be incorporated but, unlike the intact cartilage PG, they were distributed equally in the surrounding zones where fibroblast-like cells predominate. The results indicate that the intact form of cartilage PG is required for specific incorporation into the chondrocyte nodules, and further suggest that cartilage PG plays a regulatory role in the assembly of the matrix macromolecules.  相似文献   

20.
The compressive stiffness of an elastic material is traditionally characterized by its Young's modulus. Young's modulus of articular cartilage can be directly measured using unconfined compression geometry by assuming the cartilage to be homogeneous and isotropic. In isotropic materials, Young's modulus can also be determined acoustically by the measurement of sound speed and density of the material. In the present study, acoustic and mechanical techniques, feasible for in vivo measurements, were investigated to quantify the static and dynamic compressive stiffness of bovine articular cartilage in situ. Ultrasound reflection from the cartilage surface, as well as the dynamic modulus were determined with the recently developed ultrasound indentation instrument and compared with the reference mechanical and ultrasound speed measurements in unconfined compression (n=72). In addition, the applicability of manual creep measurements with the ultrasound indentation instrument was evaluated both experimentally and numerically. Our experimental results indicated that the sound speed could predict 47% and 53% of the variation in the Young's modulus and dynamic modulus of cartilage, respectively. The dynamic modulus, as determined manually with the ultrasound indentation instrument, showed significant linear correlations with the reference Young's modulus (r(2)=0.445, p<0.01, n=70) and dynamic modulus (r(2)=0.779, p<0.01, n=70) of the cartilage. Numerical analyses indicated that the creep measurements, conducted manually with the ultrasound indentation instrument, were sensitive to changes in Young's modulus and permeability of the tissue, and were significantly influenced by the tissue thickness. We conclude that acoustic parameters, i.e. ultrasound speed and reflection, are indicative to the intrinsic mechanical properties of the articular cartilage. Ultrasound indentation instrument, when further developed, provides an applicable tool for the in vivo detection of cartilage mechano-acoustic properties. These techniques could promote the diagnostics of osteoarthrosis.  相似文献   

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