4.6 Article

Structural and Mechanical Repair of Diffuse Damage in Cortical Bone In Vivo

Journal

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 12, Pages 2537-2544

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/jbmr.2309

Keywords

INDENTATION (NANO/MICRO); BIOMECHANICS; OSTEOCYTES

Funding

  1. National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal, and Skin Diseases [AR041210, AR057139, AR060445]
  2. City College of New York Doctoral Fellowship from the Grove School of Engineering

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Physiological wear and tear causes bone microdamage at several hierarchical levels, and these have different biological consequences. Bone remodeling is widely held to be the mechanism by which bone microdamage is repaired. However, recent studies showed that unlike typical linear microcracks, small crack damage, the clusters of submicron-sized matrix cracks also known as diffuse damage (Dif.Dx), does not activate remodeling. Thus, the fate of diffuse damage in vivo is not known. To examine this, we induced selectively Dif.Dx in rat ulnae in vivo by using end-load ulnar bending creep model. Changes in damage content were assessed by histomorphometry and mechanical testing immediately after loading (ie, acute loaded) or at 14 days after damage induction (ie, survival ulnae). Dif.Dx area was markedly reduced over the 14-day survival period after loading (p<0.02). We did not observe any intracortical resorption, and there was no increase in cortical bone area in survival ulnae. The reduction in whole bone stiffness in acute loaded ulnae was restored to baseline levels in survival ulnae (p>0.6). Microindentation studies showed that Dif.Dx caused a highly localized reduction in elastic modulus in diffuse damage regions of the ulnar cortex. Moduli in these previously damaged bone areas were restored to control values by 14 days after loading. Our current findings indicate that small crack damage in bone can be repaired without bone remodeling, and they suggest that alternative repair mechanisms exist in bone to deal with submicron-sized matrix cracks. Those mechanisms are currently unknown and further investigations are needed to elucidate the mechanisms by which this direct repair occurs. (c) 2014 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research

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