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Hyaline Cartilage

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Tissues are classified by their biochemical composition, molecular ... Blunt Trauma (intense compression and shear forces) Bone. Bone. Methods of Failure - Meniscus ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hyaline Cartilage


1
Cortical 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.
2
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3
AC/Meniscus Functions
  • Support large loads
  • gymnastics
  • Walking
  • Lubrication

Interested in these structures because when they
breakdown we get osteoarthritis
4
Articular 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

5
Diarthrodial joint
  • Fibrous capsule
  • Inside lined with synovium which secretes
    synovial fluid

6
Microstructure (Solid and Fluid Phase)
  • Interstitial water
  • Articular cartilage 68-85, meniscus 60-70

7
Interstitial Water
  • Constant with age
  • Increases with OA or degeneration
  • Amount of water is dependent on

8
Interstitial 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

9
Microstructure (Solid and Fluid Phase)
  • Collagen
  • Proteoglycans
  • Cells

No blood or nerves in cartilage
10
Collagen 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

11
Collagen Orientation
12
Collagen Orientation
13
Proteoglycan protein with bound side chains
(glycosaminoglycans)
14
Proteoglycans
  • Negative charge attracts ions (K and Na)
  • Swelling pressure
  • PG want to be 5-10 times larger, but not enough
    room in cartilage

15
Cells Chondrocytes
16
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17
Material Properties
  • Steel is linear elastic (E,?)
  • Soft tissues ARE NOT!!
  • Water movement (forces depend on rate-damping)

STEEL
18
Material Properties
  • Viscoelastic behavior are dominated by frictional
    drag of interstitial fluid flow through the
    porous collagen-proteoglycan solid matrix, thus
    causing viscous dissipation

19
Material Properties-Anisotropy/Inhomogeneous
  • Transversely Isotropic
  • Inhomogeneous

20
Constitutive Equation
  • Linear Elastic Materials (Steel)
  • Hookes Law ? E?
  • Viscoelastic materials (AC/meniscus)
  • Biphasic Theory (2 phase)
  • Triphasic Theory (3 phase)

21
Tension
  • 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)

22
Tension
23
Compression
  • Compressive Aggregate Modulus (HA)(0.4-1.5 MPa)

Force
Deform
time
time
Confined Compression Creep Test
24
Compression
  • HA varies inversely with water content OA
    patients have increased water
  • HA varies directly with PG content
  • Not dependent on collagen content

25
Shear
26
Shear
27
Methods of Failure-Cartilage
  • Fracture
  • Fracture with Bone
  • Wear
  • Degeneration
  • Blunt Trauma (intense compression and shear
    forces)

Bone
Bone
28
Methods of Failure - Meniscus
  • Degeneration
  • Tearing

29
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