Litcius/Paper detail

Bone remodelling in the mouse tibia is spatio-temporally modulated by oestrogen deficiency and external mechanical loading: A combined in vivo/in silico study

Vee San Cheong, Bryant C. Roberts, Visakan Kadirkamanathan, Enrico Dall’Ara

2020Acta Biomaterialia47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Osteoporosis disrupts the healthy remodelling process in bone and affects its mechanical properties. Mechanical loading has been shown to be effective in stimulating bone formation to mitigate initial bone loss. However, no study has investigated the effects of repeated mechanical loading, with a pause of one week in between, in the mouse tibia with oestrogen deficiency. This study uses a combined experimental and computational approach, through longitudinal monitoring with micro-computed tomography, to evaluate the effects of loading on bone adaptation in the tibiae of ovariectomised (OVX) C57BL/6 mice from 14 to 22 weeks of age. Micro-FE models coupled with bone adaptation algorithms were used to estimate changes in local tissue strains due to OVX and mechanical loading, and to quantify the relationship between local strain and remodelling. The first in vivo mechanical loading increased apposition, by 50-150%, while resorption decreased by 50-60%. Both endosteal and periosteal resorption increased despite the second mechanical loading, and periosteal resorption was up to 70% higher than that after the first loading. This was found to correlate with an initial decrease in average strain energy density after the first loading, which was lower and more localised after the second loading. Predictions of bone adaptation showed that between 50 and 90% of the load-induced bone apposition is linearly strain driven at the organ-level, but resorption is more biologically driven at the local level. The results imply that a systematic increase in peak load or loading rate may be required to achieve a similar bone adaptation rate in specific regions of interests.

Topics & Concepts

Mechanical loadAppositionTibiaResorptionBone resorptionBone remodelingMaterials scienceOsteoporosisIn vivoBone densityStrain (injury)MechanobiologyBiomedical engineeringBone healingAnatomyEndocrinologyMedicineBiologyComposite materialBiotechnologyBone health and osteoporosis researchBone fractures and treatmentsElasticity and Material Modeling