4.5 Article

Hyperlipidemia affects multiscale structure and strength of murine femur

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS
Volume 47, Issue 10, Pages 2436-2443

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2014.04.006

Keywords

Collagen type I; Mouse bone; High fat diet; Hyperlipidemia; Multiscale finite element

Funding

  1. XSEDE (NSF) [OCI-1053575]
  2. UCLA's Hoffman2 Cluster
  3. Orthopedic Hospital Research Center

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To improve bone strength prediction beyond limitations of assessment founded solely on the bone mineral component, we investigated the effect of hyperlipidemia, present in more than 40% of osteoporotic patients, on multiscale structure of murine bone. Our overarching purpose is to estimate bone strength accurately, to facilitate mitigating fracture morbidity and mortality in patients. Because (i) orientation of collagen type I affects, independently of degree of mineralization, cortical bone's microstructural strength; and, (ii) hyperlipidemia affects collagen orientation and mu CT volumetric tissue mineral density (vTMD) in murine cortical bone, we have constructed the first multiscale finite element (mFE), mouse-specific femoral model to study the effect of collagen orientation and vTMD on strength in Ldlr(-/-), a mouse model of hyperlipidemia, and its control wild type, on either high fat diet or normal diet. Each mu CT scan-based mFE model included either element-specific elastic orthotropic properties calculated from collagen orientation and vTMD (collagen-density model) by experimentally validated formulation, or usual element-specific elastic isotropic material properties dependent on vTMD-only (density-only model). We found that collagen orientation, assessed by circularly polarized light and confocal microscopies, and vTMD, differed among groups and that microindentation results strongly correlate with elastic modulus of collagen-density models (r(2) = 0.85, p = 10(-5)). Collagen-density models yielded (1) larger strains, and therefore lower strength, in simulations of 3-point bending and physiological loading; and (2) higher correlation between mFE-predicted strength and 3-point bending experimental strength, than density-only models. This novel method supports ongoing translational research to achieve the as yet elusive goal of accurate bone strength prediction. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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