The effect of shear fatigue on bovine articular cartilage
β Scribed by Dr. William H. Simon; Dr. Arthur Mak; Dr. Adrienne Spirt
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 796 KB
- Volume
- 8
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0736-0266
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of mechanical fatigue in the form of cyclic shear strain on articular cartilage. Three millimeter diameter fullβthickness plugs were cored from the lateral aspect of bovine tibial plateaus. Sinusoidal shear strains of Β±5, Β±10, and Β±15% were applied to the specimens at 100 Hz for 3 h (a total of 108 Β±X 10^4^ cycles). The mechanical shear properties of the tissue (loss and storage moduli) were determined as a function of the number of applied strain cycles. A rapid, irreversible decrease of approximately 35% of initial modulus was found to occur in both loss and storage modulus during application of the first 90,000 cycles. Further decay in the moduli was found to occur from 90 Β±X 10^3^ to 108 Β±X 10^4^ cycles, but was of considerably smaller magnitude than the initial decrease. The moduli remained relatively constant beyond application of 108 Β±X 10^4^ cycles. No consistent change in proteoglycan content was found to be associated with the fatigue process when comparing tested specimens with fresh untested tissue, and with experimental controls. In addition, no structural defects in the mechanically altered tissue were revealed by scanning electron microscopy.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
In a previous paper it was shown that the respiratory power of the cartilage cell declines with advancing age while the glycolytic power does not change (Rosentlial, Bowie and Wagoner, '41). I n the present communication data are presented concerning the structure of the respiratory system in articu
Cartilage proteoglycan was isolated from bovine nasal septum and fractionated according to buoyant density after dissociative CsCl density gradient centrifugation. Gelexclusion chromatography showed that hyaluronic acid was present in fractions of density lower than 1.69 g/mL. The molecular weight,
## Abstract Focal damage to articular cartilage is common in arthroscopy patients, and may contribute to progressive tissue degeneration by altering the local mechanical environment. The effects of a focal defect, which may be oriented at various orientations relative to the subchondral bone, on th