Title: Hyaline Cartilage
1Cortical Bone
- Hyaline Cartilage
- articular cartilage
- larynx
- rib and costal cartilage
- nasal septum
- Elastic Cartilage
- epiglottis
- Fibrocartilage
- Intervertebral disk
- meniscus
Trabecular Bone
Meniscus
Articular Cartilage
Tissues are classified by their biochemical
composition, molecular microstructure,
biomechanical properties and function.
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3AC/Meniscus Functions
- Support large loads
- gymnastics
- Walking
- Lubrication
Interested in these structures because when they
breakdown we get osteoarthritis
4Articular Cartilage
- Important to understand
- Mechanical properties of normal cartilage
- Manner by which biochemical and structural
factors contribute to the material properties of
cartilage - Manner by which changes in tissue composition
affect the mechanical properties of cartilage
5Diarthrodial joint
- Fibrous capsule
- Inside lined with synovium which secretes
synovial fluid
6Microstructure (Solid and Fluid Phase)
- Interstitial water
- Articular cartilage 68-85, meniscus 60-70
7Interstitial Water
- Constant with age
- Increases with OA or degeneration
- Amount of water is dependent on
8Interstitial water
- Ions-
- As tissue is compressed-Frictional drag force on
walls of the pores of the solid matrix due to
interstitial fluid flow through the pores of
collagen-PG matrix
9Microstructure (Solid and Fluid Phase)
- Collagen
- Proteoglycans
- Cells
No blood or nerves in cartilage
10Collagen made up of molecules (tropocollagen--1.4
nm) that polymerize to form fibrils
- Type II (AC), forms bundles, with diam.2 to 10
microns - Type I (meniscus), forms fibrils, with diam.
20-200 nm
11Collagen Orientation
12Collagen Orientation
13Proteoglycan protein with bound side chains
(glycosaminoglycans)
14Proteoglycans
- Negative charge attracts ions (K and Na)
- Swelling pressure
- PG want to be 5-10 times larger, but not enough
room in cartilage
15Cells Chondrocytes
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17Material Properties
- Steel is linear elastic (E,?)
- Soft tissues ARE NOT!!
- Water movement (forces depend on rate-damping)
STEEL
18Material Properties
- Viscoelastic behavior are dominated by frictional
drag of interstitial fluid flow through the
porous collagen-proteoglycan solid matrix, thus
causing viscous dissipation
19Material Properties-Anisotropy/Inhomogeneous
- Transversely Isotropic
- Inhomogeneous
20Constitutive Equation
- Linear Elastic Materials (Steel)
- Hookes Law ? E?
- Viscoelastic materials (AC/meniscus)
- Biphasic Theory (2 phase)
- Triphasic Theory (3 phase)
21Tension
- Equilibrium Tensile Modulus (1-30 MPa)
- Type of tissue
- Age of animal
- Type of joint
- Sample location
- Depth of sample (surface
10MPa, Middle 4.5MPa) - Relative orientation
- Biochemical comp/ molecular structure
- State of degeneration (Normal
10MPa, OA1.4MPa)
22Tension
23Compression
- Compressive Aggregate Modulus (HA)(0.4-1.5 MPa)
Force
Deform
time
time
Confined Compression Creep Test
24Compression
- HA varies inversely with water content OA
patients have increased water - HA varies directly with PG content
- Not dependent on collagen content
25Shear
26Shear
27Methods of Failure-Cartilage
- Fracture
- Fracture with Bone
- Wear
- Degeneration
- Blunt Trauma (intense compression and shear
forces)
Bone
Bone
28Methods of Failure - Meniscus
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