Abstract

Muscle paralysis induced with botulinum toxin (Botox) injection increases vascular porosity and reduces osteocyte lacunar density in the tibial cortical bone of skeletally mature rats. These morphological changes potentially affect interstitial fluid flow in the lacunar-canalicular porosity, which is thought to play a role in osteocyte mechanotransduction. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of disuse-induced morphological changes on interstitial fluid velocity around osteocytes in the bone cortex. Micro-CT images from a previous study that quantified the effects of Botox-induced muscle paralysis on bone microarchitecture in skeletally mature rats were used to create high-resolution, animal-specific finite element models that included the vascular pores and osteocyte lacunae within the tibial metaphysis of Botox-injected (BTX, n = 8) and saline-injected control (CTRL, n = 8) groups. To quantify fluid flow, lacunar and canalicular porosities were modeled as fluid-saturated poroelastic materials, and boundary conditions were applied to simulate physiological loading. This modeling approach allowed a detailed quantification of the fluid flow velocities around osteocytes in a relatively large volume of bone tissue. The analysis demonstrated that interstitial fluid velocity at the vascular pore surfaces was significantly lower in BTX compared to CTRL because of the decreased vascular canal separation. No significant differences in average fluid velocity were observed at the osteocyte lacunae and no correlation was found between the fluid velocity and the lacunar density, which was significantly lower in BTX. Instead, the lacunar fluid velocity was dependent on the osteocyte's specific position in the bone cortex and its proximity to a vascular pore.

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