4.6 Article

Effects of three different preservation methods on the mechanical properties of human and bovine cortical bone

Journal

BONE
Volume 47, Issue 6, Pages 1048-1053

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.bone.2010.08.012

Keywords

Cortical bone; Preservation; Mechanical property; Three point bending; Young s modulus; Energy absorption

Funding

  1. AO-Foundation

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Background and purpose In the development of new strategies for fracture fixation new methods have to be tested biomechanically under in vitro conditions before clinical trials can be performed The gold standard for laboratory evaluations is fresh-frozen specimen As the availability of fresh-frozen specimens is limited and since their use bears infectious risks specimens treated with various chemical embalming fluids are also used These preservation methods may alter the mechanical properties of the specimens used Therefore the aims of the present study were to determine the effects of three different preservation methods (formalin fixation (FO) Thiel fixation (TH) and alcohol-glycerine fixation (AG)) on the elastic and postyield mechanical properties of cortical bone and to compare these properties to those of fresh-frozen (FF) specimens Materials and methods Cylindrical cortical specimens (diameter 3 mm length 60 mm) were obtained from human femurs (n=48) and bovine tibiae (n = 40) Before specimen immersion in different fixation fluids bone mineral density (BMD) as well as the initial Young s modulus was determined The Young s modulus was determined in a nondestructive bending test and measurements were repeated after 6 months of immersion in fixative solution Subsequent to the nondestructive test a destructive 3-point bending test was conducted to assess the postyield and fracture properties Results The BMD as well as the initial Young s modulus showed no significant differences between the four test groups After 6 months in fixative solution the Young s modulus was significantly lowered in human Thiel specimens and only showed minor changes in formalin- and alcohol-glycerine-treated specimens The plastic energy absorption of human and bovine specimens was altered significantly Formalin as well as alcohol-glycerine fixation yielded a significant decrease in plastic energy absorption whereas Thiel fixation significantly increased the plastic energy absorption Discussion/conclusion Because of the significantly altered plastic mechanical properties of cortical bone the use fresh frozen bone specimens is recommended in biomechanical studies investigating failure loads of orthopaedic implants The use of embalmed specimens should be restricted to pilot tests (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc All rights reserved

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