Abstract

BackgroundRatcheting strain is produced due to the repeated accumulation of compressive strain in cartilage and may be a precursor to osteoarthritis. The aim of this study was to investigate the ratcheting behaviors of young and adult articular cartilages under cyclic compression by experiments and theoretical predictions.MethodsA series of uniaxial cyclic compression tests were conducted for young and adult cartilage, and the effects of different loading conditions on their ratcheting behaviors were probed. A theoretical ratcheting model was constructed and applied to predict the ratcheting strains of young and adult cartilages with different loading conditions.ResultsRatcheting strains of young and adult cartilages rapidly increased at the initial stage, followed by a slower increase in subsequent stages. The strain accumulation value and its rate for young cartilage were greater than them for adult cartilage. The ratcheting strains of the two groups of cartilage samples decreased with increasing stress rate, while they increased with increasing stress amplitude. As the stress amplitude increased, the gap between the ratcheting strains of young and adult cartilages increased gradually. The ratcheting strains of young and adult cartilages decreased along the cartilage depth from the surface to the deep layer. The ratcheting strains of different layers increased with the compressive cycle, and the difference among the three layers was noticeable. Additionally, the theoretical predictions agreed with the experimental data.ConclusionsOverall, the ratcheting behavior of articular cartilage is affected by the degree of articular cartilage maturation.

Highlights

  • Ratcheting strain is produced due to the repeated accumulation of compressive strain in cartilage and may be a precursor to osteoarthritis

  • Ratcheting behaviors of young and adult articular cartilages The stress–strain curves of young and adult articular cartilages were obtained under cyclic compression and Fig. 4a, b shows the stress–strain curves for young and adult cartilages with stress amplitude of 1 MPa and stress rate of 2 MPa/s

  • It is noted that the ratcheting strain of young cartilage is a little more than that of adult cartilage with small stress amplitude

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Summary

Introduction

Ratcheting strain is produced due to the repeated accumulation of compressive strain in cartilage and may be a precursor to osteoarthritis. The aim of this study was to investigate the ratcheting behaviors of young and adult articular carti‐ lages under cyclic compression by experiments and theoretical predictions. Ratcheting behavior is an inelastic cyclic deformation characteristic of material under asymmetric stress cycling. Articular cartilage undergoes an asymmetric stress-control cycle load with an average stress. Gao et al BioMed Eng OnLine (2019) 18:85 greater than zero, and ratcheting deformation of articular cartilage is produced. When the strain accumulates to a certain extent, fatigue damage of cartilage can be caused, and osteoarthritis can occur in the joint. It is worthwhile to study the ratcheting behavior of articular cartilage under cyclic loading

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