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Changes in subchondral bone structure and mechanical properties do not substantially affect cartilage mechanical responses – A finite element study

Heta Orava, Lingwei Huang, Simo Ojanen, Janne Mäkelä, Mikko Finnilä, Simo Saarakkala, Walter Herzog, Rami K. Korhonen, Juha Töyräs, Petri Tanska

2022Journal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials/Journal of mechanical behavior of biomedical materials11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Subchondral bone structure has been observed to change in osteoarthritis (OA). However, it remains unclear how the early-stage OA changes affect the mechanics (stresses and strains) of the osteochondral unit. In this study, we aim to characterize the effect of subchondral bone structure and mechanical properties on the osteochondral unit mechanics. A 3-D finite element model of the osteochondral unit was constructed based on a rabbit femoral condyle μCT data and subjected to creep loading in indentation. Trabecular bone volume fraction, subchondral bone plate thickness, and equilibrium modulus were varied (including experimentally observed changes in early OA) to characterize the effect of these parameters on the osteochondral unit mechanics. At the end of the creep phase, the maximum principal strain at the bone surface of the cartilage-bone interface was decreased by 50% when the trabecular bone volume fraction was reduced from 48% to 28%. The maximum principal stress at the same location was decreased by 36% when plate thickness was reduced by 100 μm (-31%). In cartilage, small changes in the mechanics were seen near the cartilage-bone interface with a considerably thinner (-31%) plate. The changes in trabecular bone volume fraction, subchondral bone thickness and plate equilibrium modulus did not substantially affect the cartilage mechanics. Our results suggest that experimentally observed changes that occur in the subchondral bone structure in early OA have a minimal effect on cartilage mechanics under creep indentation loading; clear changes in the cartilage mechanics were seen only with an unrealistically soft subchondral bone plate.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceCartilageSubchondral boneBiomedical engineeringOsteoarthritisVolume fractionCondyleBiomechanicsCreepAnatomyComposite materialMedicineArticular cartilagePathologyAlternative medicineOsteoarthritis Treatment and MechanismsLower Extremity Biomechanics and PathologiesBone and Joint Diseases
Changes in subchondral bone structure and mechanical properties do not substantially affect cartilage mechanical responses – A finite element study | Litcius