3.9 Article

Assessing cortical bone mechanical properties using collagen proton fraction from ultrashort echo time magnetization transfer (UTE-MT) MRI modeling

Journal

BONE REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bonr.2019.100220

Keywords

Cortical bone; MRI; Ultrashort echo time; Mechanical properties; Bone microstructure; Magnetization transfer

Funding

  1. NIH [1R21AR073496, R01AR068987, 1R01AR062581-01A1]
  2. VA Clinical Science and Rehabilitation RD [I01CX001388, I01RX002604]

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Cortical bone shows as a signal void when using conventional clinical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Ultrashort echo time MRI (UTE-MRI) can acquire high signal from cortical bone, thus enabling quantitative assessments. Magnetization transfer (MT) imaging combined with UTE-MRI can indirectly assess protons in the organic matrix of bone. This study aimed to examine UTE-MT MRI techniques to estimate the mechanical properties of cortical bone. A total of 156 rectangular human cortical bone strips were harvested from the tibial and femoral midshafts of 43 donors (62 +/- 22 years old, 62 specimens from females, 94 specimens from males). Bone specimens were scanned using UTE-MT sequences on a clinical 3 T MRI scanner and on a micro-computed tomography (mu CT) scanner. A series of MT pulse saturation powers (400 degrees, 600 degrees, 800 degrees) and frequency offsets (2, 5, 10, 20, 50 kHz) was used to measure the macromolecular fraction (MMF) utilizing a two-pool MT model. Failure mechanical properties of the bone specimens were measured using 4-point bending tests. MMF from MRI results showed significant strong correlations with cortical bone porosity (R=-0.72, P < 0.01) and bone mineral density (BMD) (R=+0.71, P < 0.01). MMF demonstrated significant moderate correlations with Young modulus, yield stress, and ultimate stress (R= 0.60-0.61, P < 0.01). These results suggest that the two-pool UTE-MT model focusing on the organic matrix of bone can potentially serve as a novel tool to detect the variations of bone mechanical properties and intracortical porosity.

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