Abstract

Human bones sustain fatigue damage in the form of in vivo microcracks as a result of the normal everyday loading activities. These microcracks appear to preferentially accumulate in certain regions of bone and most notably in interstitial bone matrix areas. These are remnants of old bone tissue left unremodelled, which show a higher than average mineral content and consequently the occurrence of microcracks has been attributed to the possible brittleness brought about by such hypermineralisation. There is a need, therefore, for information on the in situ bone matrix properties in the vicinity of such in vivo microcracks to elucidate the possible causes of their appearance. The present study examined the elastic, strain rate (viscous) and plastic properties of bone matrix in selectively targeted areas by nanoindentation and in both quasistatic and dynamic mode. The results showed that in vivo crack areas are not as stiff as some well-known extremely mineralised and brittle bone examples (bulla, rostrum); the strain rate effects of crack regions were identical to those of other regions of human bone and agreed well with values collected for human bone in the past at the macroscale; while the plasticity index of the crack regions was also not statistically different from most bone examples (including human at random, bovine, bulla and rostrum) except antler, which showed lower plasticity and thus a greater fraction of elastic recovery in indentation energy. It is difficult, therefore, to explain the susceptibility of these interstitial regions to crack in terms of the mineral content and its after-effects on elasticity, viscosity and plasticity alone, but one need to attribute the cracks to the cumulative loading history of these areas, or raise the suggestion that these areas of bone matrix are in some measure 'aged' or material/quality defective.

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