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1.
The chondrocytes of adult articular cartilage rely upon transport phenomena within their avascular extracellular matrix for many biological activities. Therefore, changes in matrix structure which influence cytokine transport parameters may be an important mechanism involved in the chondrocyte response to tissue compression. With this hypothesis in mind, partitioning and diffusion of 3-, 10-, and 40-kDa dextrans conjugated to tetramethylrhodamine, and 430-Da tetramethylrhodamine itself, were measured within statically compressed bovine articular cartilage explants using a novel experimental apparatus and desorption fluorescence method. Partitioning and diffusion were examined as functions of solute molecular weight and matrix proteoglycan density, and diffusion was measured versus static compression up to 35% volumetric strain. In general, partition coefficients and diffusivities were found to decrease with increasing solute molecular weight. In addition, for a given solute, diffusivities decreased significantly with increasing static compression. Results therefore suggest a possible role for transport limitations of relatively large molecular weight solutes within the extracellular matrix in mediating the biological response of chondrocytes to cartilage compression.  相似文献   

2.
Solute transport within articular cartilage is of central importance to tissue physiology, and may mediate effects of mechanical compression on cell metabolism. We therefore developed and applied a freeze-substitution method for fixation of cartilage explant disks which had been compressed axially during radial solute desorption. Dextrans were used as model solutes. Explant morphology was well preserved and nonequilibrium solute concentration distributions were stable for several hours at room temperature. For desorption from explants compressed statically to 0-46% strain, analysis of laser confocal images and comparison to a theoretical model permitted measurement of effective diffusivities. Results were consistent with previous studies suggesting a role for transport limitations in mediating the decreases of chondrocyte metabolic rates associated with static compression. In explants compressed dynamically (23+/-5% strain at 0.001 Hz), evidence was obtained for the augmentation of effective transport rate of 3 kDa dextrans by oscillatory interstitial fluid flows. This suggests that augmented solute transport may play a role in mediating the increases of chondrocyte metabolic rates associated with dynamic compression. Methods appear suitable for quantitative studies of transport within mechanically compressed cartilage-like tissues, and may be valuable for identification of loading environments which optimize solute transport in tissue engineering applications.  相似文献   

3.
Chondrocytes depend upon solute transport within the avascular extracellular matrix of articular cartilage for many of their biological activities. Alterations to solute transport parameters may therefore mediate the cell response to tissue compression. While interstitial solute transport may be supplemented by convection during dynamic tissue compression, matrix compression is also associated with decreased diffusivities. Such trade-offs between increased convection and decreased diffusivities of solutes in dynamically compressed cartilage remain largely unexplored. We measured diffusion and convection coefficients of a wide range of solutes in mature bovine cartilage explant disks subjected to radially unconfined axial ramp compression and release. Solutes included approximately 500 Da fluorophores bearing positive and negative charges, and 10 kDa dextrans bearing positive, neutral, and negative charges. Significantly positive values of convection coefficients were measured for several different solutes. Findings therefore support a role for solute convection in mediating the cartilage biological response to dynamic compression.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Solute transport through the extracellular matrix is essential for cellular activities in articular cartilage. Increased solute transport via fluid convection may be a mechanism by which dynamic compression stimulates chondrocyte metabolism. However, loading conditions that optimally augment transport likely vary for different solutes. To investigate effects of dynamic loading on transport of a bioactive solute, triangular mechanical loading waveforms were applied to cartilage explants disks while interstitial transport of a fluorescent glucose analog was monitored. Peak-to-peak compression amplitudes varied from 5-50% and frequencies varied from 0.0006-0.1 Hz to alter the spatial distribution and magnitude of oscillatory fluid flow. Solute transport was quantified by monitoring accumulation of fluorescence in a saline bath circulated around the explant. Individual explants were subjected to a series of compression protocols, so that effects of loading on solute desorption could be observed directly. Maximum increases in solute transport were obtained with 10-20% compression amplitudes at 0.1 Hz; similar loading protocols were previously found to stimulate chondrocyte metabolism in vitro. Results therefore support hypotheses relating to increased solute transport as a mediator of the cartilage biological response to dynamic compression, and may have application in mechanical conditioning of cartilage constructs for tissue engineering.  相似文献   

6.
At mechanical equilibrium, articular cartilage is usually characterized as an isotropic elastic material with no interstitial fluid flow. In this study, the equilibrium properties (Young's modulus, aggregate modulus and Poisson's ratio) of bovine humeral, patellar and femoral cartilage specimens (n=26) were investigated using unconfined compression, confined compression, and indentation tests. Optical measurements of the Poisson's ratio of cartilage were also carried out. Mean values of the Young's modulus (assessed from the unconfined compression test) were 0.80+/-0.33, 0.57+/-0.17 and 0.31+/-0.18MPa and of the Poisson's ratio (assessed from the optical test) 0.15+/-0.06, 0.16+/-0.05 and 0.21+/-0.05 for humeral, patellar, and femoral cartilages, respectively. The indentation tests showed 30-79% (p<0.01) higher Young's modulus values than the unconfined compression tests. In indentation, values of the Young's modulus were independent of the indenter diameter only in the humeral cartilage. The mean values of the Poisson's ratio, obtained indirectly using the mathematical relation between the Young's modulus and the aggregate modulus in isotropic material, were 0.16+/-0.06, 0.21+/-0.05, and 0.26+/-0.08 for humeral, patellar, and femoral cartilages, respectively. We conclude that the values of the elastic parameters of the cartilage are dependent on the measurement technique in use. Based on the similar values of Poisson's ratios, as determined directly or indirectly, the equilibrium response of articular cartilage under unconfined and confined compression is satisfactorily described by the isotropic elastic model. However, values of the isotropic Young's modulus obtained from the in situ indentation tests are higher than those obtained from the in vitro unconfined or confined compression tests and may depend on the indenter size in use.  相似文献   

7.
A primary mechanism of solute transport in articular cartilage is believed to occur through passive diffusion across the articular surface, but cyclical loading has been shown experimentally to enhance the transport of large solutes. The objective of this study is to examine the effect of dynamic loading within a theoretical context, and to investigate the circumstances under which convective transport induced by dynamic loading might supplement diffusive transport. The theory of incompressible mixtures was used to model the tissue (gel) as a mixture of a gel solid matrix (extracellular matrix/scaffold), and two fluid phases (interstitial fluid solvent and neutral solute), to solve the problem of solute transport through the lateral surface of a cylindrical sample loaded dynamically in unconfined compression with frictionless impermeable platens in a bathing solution containing an excess of solute. The resulting equations are governed by nondimensional parameters, the most significant of which are the ratio of the diffusive velocity of the interstitial fluid in the gel to the solute diffusivity in the gel (Rg), the ratio of actual to ideal solute diffusive velocities inside the gel (Rd), the ratio of loading frequency to the characteristic frequency of the gel (f), and the compressive strain amplitude (epsilon 0). Results show that when Rg > 1, Rd < 1, and f > 1, dynamic loading can significantly enhance solute transport into the gel, and that this effect is enhanced as epsilon 0 increases. Based on representative material properties of cartilage and agarose gels, and diffusivities of various solutes in these gels, it is found that the ranges Rg > 1, Rd < 1, correspond to large solutes, whereas f > 1 is in the range of physiological loading frequencies. These theoretical predictions are thus in agreement with the limited experimental data available in the literature. The results of this study apply to any porous hydrated tissue or material, and it is therefore plausible to hypothesize that dynamic loading may serve to enhance solute transport in a variety of physiological processes.  相似文献   

8.
Unconfined compression test has been frequently used to study the mechanical behaviors of articular cartilage, both theoretically and experimentally. It has also been used in explant and gel-cell-complex studies in tissue engineering. In biphasic and poroelastic theories, the effect of charges fixed on the proteoglycan macromolecules in articular cartilage is embodied in the apparent compressive Young's modulus and the apparent Poisson's ratio of the tissue, and the fluid pressure is considered to be the portion above the osmotic pressure. In order to understand how proteoglycan fixed charges might affect the mechanical behaviors of articular cartilage, and in order to predict the osmotic pressure and electric fields inside the tissue in this experimental configuration, it is necessary to use a model that explicitly takes into account the charged nature of the tissue and the flow of ions within its porous interstices. In this paper, we used a finite element model based on the triphasic theory to study how fixed charges in the porous-permeable soft tissue can modulate its mechanical and electrochemical responses under a step displacement in unconfined compression. The results from finite element calculations showed that: 1) A charged tissue always supports a larger load than an uncharged tissue of the same intrinsic elastic moduli. 2) The apparent Young's modulus (the ratio of the equilibrium axial stress to the axial strain) is always greater than the intrinsic Young's modulus of an uncharged tissue. 3) The apparent Poisson's ratio (the negative ratio of the lateral strain to the axial strain) is always larger than the intrinsic Poisson's ratio of an uncharged tissue. 4) Load support derives from three sources: intrinsic matrix stiffness, hydraulic pressure and osmotic pressure. Under the unconfined compression, the Donnan osmotic pressure can constitute between 13%-22% of the total load support at equilibrium. 5) During the stress-relaxation process following the initial instant of loading, the diffusion potential (due to the gradient of the fixed charge density and the associated gradient of ion concentrations) and the streaming potential (due to fluid convection) compete against each other. Within the physiological range of material parameters, the polarity of the electric potential depends on both the mechanical properties and the fixed charge density (FCD) of the tissue. For softer tissues, the diffusion effects dominate the electromechanical response, while for stiffer tissues, the streaming potential dominates this response. 6) Fixed charges do not affect the instantaneous strain field relative to the initial equilibrium state. However, there is a sudden increase in the fluid pressure above the initial equilibrium osmotic pressure. These new findings are relevant and necessary for the understanding of cartilage mechanics, cartilage biosynthesis, electromechanical signal transduction by chondrocytes, and tissue engineering.  相似文献   

9.
Chondrocytes depend upon solute transport within the avascular extracellular matrix of adult articular cartilage for many of their biological activities. Alterations to bioactive solute transport may, therefore, represent a mechanism by which cartilage compression is transduced into cellular metabolic responses. We investigated the effects of cartilage static compression on diffusivity and partitioning of a range of model solutes including dextrans of molecular weights 3 and 40 kDa, and tetramethylrhodamine (a 430 Da fluorophore). New fluorescence methods were developed for real-time visualization and measurement of transport within compressed cartilage explants. Experimental design allowed for multiple measurements on individual explants at different compression levels in order to minimize confounding influences of compositional variations. Results demonstrate that physiological levels of static compression may significantly decrease solute diffusivity and partitioning in cartilage. Effects of compression were most dramatic for the relatively high molecular weight solutes. For 40 kDa dextran, diffusivity decreased significantly (p<0.01) between 8% and 23% compression, while partitioning of 3 and 40 kDa dextran decreased significantly (p<0.01) between free-swelling conditions and 8% compression. Since diffusivity and partitioning can influence pericellular concentrations of bioactive solutes, these observations support a role for perturbations to solute transport in mediating the cartilage biological response to compression.  相似文献   

10.
Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the most potential non-invasive means for revealing the structure, composition and pathology of articular cartilage. Here we hypothesize that cartilage mechanical properties as determined by the macromolecular framework and their interactions can be accessed by quantitative MRI. To test this, adjacent cartilage disk pairs (n=32) were prepared from bovine proximal humerus and patellofemoral surfaces. For one sample, the tissue Young's modulus, aggregate modulus, dynamic modulus and Poisson's ratio were determined in unconfined compression. The adjacent disk was studied at 9.4T to determine the tissue T(2) relaxation time, sensitive to the integrity of the collagen network, and T(1) relaxation time in the presence of Gd-DTPA, a technique developed for the estimation of cartilage proteoglycan (PG) content. Quantitative MRI parameters were able to explain up to 87% of the variations in certain biomechanical parameters. Correlations were further improved when data from the proximal humerus was assessed separately. MRI parameters revealed a topographical variation similar to that of mechanical parameters. Linear regression analysis revealed that Young's modulus of cartilage may be characterized more completely by combining both collagen- and PG-sensitive MRI parameters. The present results suggest that quantitative MRI can provide important information on the mechanical properties of articular cartilage. The results are encouraging with respect to functional imaging of cartilage, although in vivo applicability may be limited by the inferior resolution of clinical MRI instruments.  相似文献   

11.
Resistance to fluid flow within cartilage extracellular matrix is provided primarily by a dense network of rod-like glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). If the geometrical organization of this network is random, the hydraulic permeability tensor of cartilage is expected to be isotropic. However, experimental data have suggested that hydraulic permeability may become anisotropic when the matrix is mechanically compressed, contributing to cartilage biomechanical functions such as lubrication. We hypothesized that this may be due to preferred GAG rod orientations and directionally-dependent reduction of inter-GAG spacings which reflect molecular responses to tissue deformations. To examine this hypothesis, we developed a model for effects of compression which allows the GAG rod network to deform consistently with tissue-scale deformations but while still respecting limitations imposed by molecular structure. This network deformation model was combined with a perturbation analysis of a classical analytical model for hydraulic permeability based on molecular structure. Finite element analyses were undertaken to ensure that this approach exhibited results similar to those emerging from more exact calculations. Model predictions for effects of uniaxial confined compression on the hydraulic permeability tensor were consistent with previous experimental results. Permeability decreased more rapidly in the direction perpendicular to compression than in the parallel direction, for matrix solid volume fractions associated with fluid transport in articular cartilage. GAG network deformations may therefore introduce anisotropy to the permeability (and other GAG-associated matrix properties) as physiological compression is applied, and play an important role in cartilage lubrication and other biomechanical functions.  相似文献   

12.
Electrokinetic phenomena contribute to biomechanical functions of articular cartilage and underlie promising methods for early detection of osteoarthritic lesions. Although some transport properties, such as hydraulic permeability, are known to become anisotropic with compression, the direction-dependence of cartilage electrokinetic properties remains unknown. Electroosmosis experiments were therefore performed on adult bovine articular cartilage samples, whereby fluid flows were driven by electric currents in directions parallel and perpendicular to the articular surface of statically compressed explants. Magnitudes of electrokinetic coefficients decreased slightly with compression (from approximately -7.5 microL/As in the range of 0-20% compression to -6.0 microL/As in the 35-50% range) consistent with predictions of microstructure-based models of cartilage material properties. However, no significant dependence on direction of the electrokinetic coupling coefficient was detected, even for conditions where the hydraulic permeability tensor is known to be anisotropic. This contrast may also be interpreted using microstructure-based models, and provides insights into structure-function relationships in cartilage extracellular matrix and physical mediators of cell responses to tissue compression. Findings support the use of relatively simple isotropic modeling approaches for electrokinetic phenomena in cartilage and related materials, and indicate that measurement of electrokinetic properties may provide particularly robust means for clinical evaluation of cartilage matrix integrity.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of doxycycline were examined on articular cartilage glycosaminoglycan (GAG) release and biphasic mechanical properties following two levels of impact loading at 1 and 2 weeks post-injury. Further, treatment for two continuous weeks was compared to treatment for only the 1st week of a 2-week culture period. Following impact at two levels, articular cartilage explants were cultured for 1 or 2 weeks with 0, 50, or 100 microM doxycycline. Histology, GAG release to the media, and creep indentation biomechanical properties were examined. The "High" (2.8 J) impact level had gross surface damage, whereas "Low" (1.1 J) impact was indiscernible from non-impacted controls. GAG staining decreased after High impact, but doxycycline did not visibly affect staining. High impact resulted in decreased aggregate moduli at both 1 and 2 weeks and increased permeability at 2 weeks, but tissue mechanical properties were not affected by doxycycline treatment. At 1 week, High impact resulted in more GAG release compared to non-impacted controls. However, following High impact, 100 microM doxycycline reduced cumulative GAG release at 1 and 2 weeks by 30% and 38%, respectively, compared to no treatment. Interestingly, there was no difference in GAG release comparing 2 weeks continuous treatment with 1 week on, 1 week off. These results support the hypothesis that doxycycline can mitigate GAG release from articular cartilage following impact loads. However, doxycycline was unable to prevent the loss of tissue stiffness observed post-impact, presumably due to initial matrix damage resulting solely from mechanical trauma.  相似文献   

14.
Structure and properties of knee articular cartilage are adapted to stresses exposed on it during physiological activities. In this study, we describe site- and depth-dependence of the biomechanical properties of bovine knee articular cartilage. We also investigate the effects of tissue structure and composition on the biomechanical parameters as well as characterize experimentally and numerically the compression-tension nonlinearity of the cartilage matrix. In vitro mechano-optical measurements of articular cartilage in unconfined compression geometry are conducted to obtain material parameters, such as thickness, Young's and aggregate modulus or Poisson's ratio of the tissue. The experimental results revealed significant site- and depth-dependent variations in recorded parameters. After enzymatic modification of matrix collagen or proteoglycans our results show that collagen primarily controls the dynamic tissue response while proteoglycans affect more the static properties. Experimental measurements in compression and tension suggest a nonlinear compression-tension behavior of articular cartilage in the direction perpendicular to articular surface. Fibril reinforced poroelastic finite element model was used to capture the experimentally found compression-tension nonlinearity of articular cartilage.  相似文献   

15.
The mechanical environment of the chondrocyte is an important factor that influences the maintenance of the articular cartilage extracellular matrix. Previous studies have utilized theoretical models of chondrocytes within articular cartilage to predict the stress-strain and fluid flow environments around the cell, but little is currently known regarding the cellular properties which are required for implementation of these models. The objectives of this study were to characterize the mechanical behavior of primary human chondrocytes and to determine the Young's modulus of chondrocytes from non-osteoarthritic ('normal') and osteoarthritic cartilage. A second goal was to quantify changes in the volume of isolated chondrocytes in response to mechanical deformation. The micropipette aspiration technique was used to measure the deformation of a single chondrocyte into a glass micropipette in response to a prescribed pressure. The results of this study indicate that the human chondrocyte behaves as a viscoelastic solid. No differences were found between the Young's moduli of normal (0.65+/-0.63 kPa, n = 44) and osteoarthritic chondrocytes (0.67+/-0.86 kPa, n = 69, p = 0.93). A significant difference in cell volume was observed immediately and 600 s after complete aspiration of the cell into the pipette (p < 0.001), and the magnitude of this volume change between normal (11+/-11%, n = 40) and osteoarthritic (20+/-11%, n = 41) chondroctyes was significantly different at both time points (p < 0.002). This finding suggests that chondrocytes from osteoarthritic cartilage may have altered volume regulation capabilities in response to mechanical deformation. The mechanical and volumetric properties determined in this study will be of use in analytical and finite element models of chondrocyte-matrix interactions in order to better predict the mechanical environment of the cell in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
Biomechanical models for biological tissues such as articular cartilage generally contain an ideal, dilute solution assumption. In this article, a biomechanical triphasic model of cartilage is described that includes nondilute treatment of concentrated solutions such as those applied in vitrification of biological tissues. The chemical potential equations of the triphasic model are modified and the transport equations are adjusted for the volume fraction and frictional coefficients of the solutes that are not negligible in such solutions. Four transport parameters, i.e., water permeability, solute permeability, diffusion coefficient of solute in solvent within the cartilage, and the cartilage stiffness modulus, are defined as four degrees of freedom for the model. Water and solute transport in cartilage were simulated using the model and predictions of average concentration increase and cartilage weight were fit to experimental data to obtain the values of the four transport parameters. As far as we know, this is the first study to formulate the solvent and solute transport equations of nondilute solutions in the cartilage matrix. It is shown that the values obtained for the transport parameters are within the ranges reported in the available literature, which confirms the proposed model approach.  相似文献   

17.
It has been well established that articular cartilage is compositionally and mechanically inhomogenous through its depth. To what extent this structural inhomogeneity is a prerequisite for appropriate cartilage function and integrity is not well understood. The first hypothesis to be tested in this study was that the depth-dependent inhomogeneity of the cartilage acts to maximize the interstitial fluid load support at the articular surface, to provide efficient frictional and wear properties. The second hypothesis was that the inhomogeneity produces a more homogeneous state of elastic stress in the matrix than would be achieved with uniform properties. We have, for the first time, simultaneously determined depth-dependent tensile and compressive properties of human patellofemoral cartilage from unconfined compression stress relaxation tests. The results show that the tensile modulus increases significantly from 4.1 +/- 1.9 MPa in the deep zone to 8.3 +/- 3.7 MPa at the superficial zone, while the compressive modulus decreases from 0.73 +/- 0.26 MPa to 0.28 +/- 0.16 MPa. The experimental measurements were then implemented with the finite-element method to compute the response of an inhomogeneous and homogeneous cartilage layer to loading. The finite-element models demonstrate that structural inhomogeneity acts to increase the interstitial fluid load support at the articular surface. However, the state of stress, strain, or strain energy density in the solid matrix remained inhomogeneous through the depth of the articular layer, whether or not inhomogeneous material properties were employed. We suggest that increased fluid load support at the articular surface enhances the frictional and wear properties of articular cartilage, but that the tissue is not functionally adapted to produce homogeneous stress, strain, or strain energy density distributions. Interstitial fluid pressurization, but not a homogeneous elastic stress distribution, appears thus to be a prerequisite for the functional and morphological integrity of the cartilage.  相似文献   

18.
Allografts of articular cartilage are both used clinically for tissue-transplantation procedures and experimentally as model systems to study the physiological behavior of chondrocytes in their native extracellular matrix. Long-term maintenance of allograft tissue is challenging. Chemical mediators in poorly defined culture media can stimulate cells to quickly degrade their surrounding extracellular matrix. This is particularly true of juvenile cartilage which is generally more responsive to chemical stimuli than mature tissue. By carefully modulating the culture media, however, it may be possible to preserve allograft tissue over the long-term while maintaining its original mechanical and biochemical properties. In this study juvenile bovine cartilage explants (both chondral and osteochondral) were cultured in both chemically defined medium and serum-supplemented medium for up to 6 weeks. The mechanical properties and biochemical content of explants cultured in chemically defined medium were enhanced after 2 weeks in culture and thereafter remained stable with no loss of cell viability. In contrast, the mechanical properties of explants in serum-supplemented medium were degraded by ( approximately 70%) along with a concurrent loss of biochemical content (30-40% GAG). These results suggest that long-term maintenance of allografts can be extended significantly by the use of a chemically defined medium.  相似文献   

19.
Li LP  Herzog W 《Biorheology》2004,41(3-4):181-194
The relative importance of fluid-dependent and fluid-independent transient mechanical behavior in articular cartilage was examined for tensile and unconfined compression testing using a fibril reinforced model. The collagen matrix of articular cartilage was modeled as viscoelastic using a quasi-linear viscoelastic formulation with strain-dependent elastic modulus, while the proteoglycan matrix was considered as linearly elastic. The collagen viscoelastic properties were obtained by fitting experimental data from a tensile test. These properties were used to investigate unconfined compression testing, and the sensitivity of the properties was also explored. It was predicted that the stress relaxation observed in tensile tests was not caused by fluid pressurization at the macroscopic level. A multi-step tensile stress relaxation test could be approximated using a hereditary integral in which the elastic fibrillar modulus was taken to be a linear function of the fibrillar strain. Applying the same formulation to the radial fibers in unconfined compression, stress relaxation could not be simulated if fluid pressurization were absent. Collagen viscoelasticity was found to slightly weaken fluid pressurization in unconfined compression, and this effect was relatively more significant at moderate strain rates. Therefore, collagen viscoelasticity appears to play an import role in articular cartilage in tensile testing, while fluid pressurization dominates the transient mechanical behavior in compression. Collagen viscoelasticity plays a minor role in the mechanical response of cartilage in unconfined compression if significant fluid flow is present.  相似文献   

20.
The pericellular matrix (PCM) is a narrow region of cartilaginous tissue that surrounds chondrocytes in articular cartilage. Previous modeling studies indicate that the mechanical properties of the PCM relative to those of the extracellular matrix (ECM) can significantly affect the stress-strain, fluid flow, and physicochemical environments of the chondrocyte, suggesting that the PCM plays a biomechanical role in articular cartilage. The goals of this study were to measure the mechanical properties of the PCM using micropipette aspiration coupled with a linear biphasic finite element model, and to determine the alterations in the mechanical properties of the PCM with osteoarthritis (OA). Using a recently developed isolation technique, chondrons (the chondrocyte and its PCM) were mechanically extracted from non-degenerate and osteoarthritic human cartilage. The transient mechanical behavior of the PCM was well-described by a biphasic model, suggesting that the viscoelastic response of the PCM is attributable to flow-dependent effects, similar to that of the ECM. With OA, the mean Young's modulus of the PCM was significantly decreased (38.7+/-16.2 kPa vs. 23.5+/-12.9 kPa, p < 0.001), and the permeability was significantly elevated (4.19+/-3.78 x10(-17) m(4)/Ns vs. 10.2+/-9.38 x 10(-17) m(4)/Ns, p < 0.01). The Poisson's ratio was similar for both non-degenerate and OA PCM (0.044+/-0.063 vs. 0.030+/-0.068, p > 0.6). These findings suggest that the PCM may undergo degenerative processes with OA, similar to those occurring in the ECM. In combination with previous theoretical models of cell-matrix interactions in cartilage, our findings suggest that changes in the properties of the PCM with OA may have an important influence on the biomechanical environment of the chondrocyte.  相似文献   

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