Abstract
Osteoporosis-related bone damage causes major socioeconomic problems. For efficient use of therapeutic agents, it is necessary to be able to reliably identify patients with high propensity for nontraumatic fracture. Age-related bone loss imposes several architectural changes in bone; one of the few ways to estimate damage due to individual changes, and hence determine the most serious types of damage, is via the analysis of suitable mathematical models. Anatomical sites such as the vertebral body, proximal femur, and distal radius are locations where most age-related fractures occur. The inner porous (or trabecular) bone from these sites, which resemble disordered cubic networks, play a significant role in load transmission at these sites. Analysis of a mathematical model of porous bone is used to show that perforation of elements of the network is the most damaging architectural change to a bone. We also show that an expression for bone strength, derived on this basis, can capture changes in strength caused by the inclusion of other features like thinning of trabecular bone and the anisotropy of the network. We finally argue that bone density, which is currently the most routinely used diagnostic, cannot be a reliable surrogate for bone strength.
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