Abstract

The influence of ageing on the fracture mechanics of cortical bone tissue is well documented, though little is known about if and how related material properties are further affected in two of the most prominent musculoskeletal diseases, osteoporosis and osteoarthritis (OA). The femoral neck, in close proximity to the most pertinent osteoporotic fracture site and near the hip joint affected by osteoarthritis, is a site of particular interest for investigation. We have recently shown that Reference Point micro-Indentation (RPI) detects differences between cortical bone from the femoral neck of healthy, osteoporotic fractured and osteoarthritic hip replacement patients. RPI is a new technique with potential for in vivo bone quality assessment. However, interpretation of RPI results is limited because the specific changes in bone properties with pathology are not well understood and, further, because it is not conclusive what properties are being assessed by RPI. Here, we investigate whether the differences previously detected between healthy and diseased cortical bone from the femoral neck might reflect changes in fracture toughness. Together with this, we investigate which additional properties are reflected in RPI measures. RPI (using the Biodent device) and fracture toughness tests were conducted on samples from the inferomedial neck of bone resected from donors with: OA (41 samples from 15 donors), osteoporosis (48 samples from 14 donors) and non age-matched cadaveric controls (37 samples from 10 donoros) with no history of bone disease. Further, a subset of indented samples were imaged using micro-computed tomography (3 osteoporotic and 4 control samples each from different donors) as well as fluorescence microscopy in combination with serial sectioning after basic fuchsin staining (7 osteoporotic and 5 control samples from 5 osteoporotic and 5 control donors). In this study, the bulk indentation and fracture resistance properties of the inferomedial femoral neck in osteoporotic fracture, severe OA and control bone were comparable (p > 0.05 for fracture properties and <10% difference for indentation) but fracture toughness reduced with advancing age (7.0% per decade, r = -0.36, p = 0.029). Further, RPI properties (in particular, the indentation distance increase, IDI) showed partial correlation with fracture toughness (r = -0.40, p = 0.023) or derived elastic modulus (r = -0.40, p = 0.023). Multimodal indent imaging revealed evidence of toughening mechanisms (i.e. crack deflection, bridging and microcracking), elastoplastic response (in terms of the non-conical imprint shape and presence of pile-up) and correlation of RPI with damage extent (up to r=0.79, p=0.034) and indent size (up to r=0.82, p<0.001). Therefore, crack resistance, deformation resistance and, additionally, micro-structure (porosity: r=0.93, p=0.002 as well as pore proximity: r = -0.55, p = 0.027 for correlation with IDI) are all contributory to RPI. Consequently, it becomes clear that RPI measures represent a multitude of properties, various aspects of bone quality, but are not necessarily strongly correlated to a single mechanical property. In addition, osteoporosis or osteoarthritis do not seem to further influence fracture toughness of the inferomedial femoral neck beyond natural ageing. Since bone is highly heterogeneous, whether this finding can be extended to the whole femoral neck or whether it also holds true for other femoral neck quadrants or other material properties remains to be shown.

Highlights

  • Osteoporosis and osteoarthritis are two of the most prevalent and impactful musculoskeletal disorders

  • The bulk material properties of the cortical bone samples in terms of fracture resistance (Kslope and Jslope), fracture toughness (Kmax and Jmax), derived elastic modulus (Emod) and indentation properties (TID, IDI and CID) are generally not significantly different across groups (0.8% to 34.2% difference, p > 0.05, Fig. 6a,b and Table 1). Exceptions to this are a marginally higher derived elastic modulus in the osteoporotic group relative to the control and a higher TID in the osteoarthritic (THR) group compared to the osteoporotic fracture group

  • Influence of age Cortical bone at the inferomedial femoral neck suffers a 7.0% reduction in fracture toughness per decade, as demonstrated through our results

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Summary

Introduction

Osteoporosis and osteoarthritis are two of the most prevalent and impactful musculoskeletal disorders. Other differences in bone quality such as structure (e.g. cortical thinning, increased porosity or reduced trabeculae connectivity (Poole et al, 2010; Bell et al, 1999; Keaveny and Yeh, 2002)), composition and material properties may contribute to osteoporosis This rationale has moved the definition of osteoporosis away from BMD alone towards a condition of compromised mechanical integrity and increased fracture risk (NIH, 2000). There is increasing evidence of changes to bone in osteoarthritis and not just cartilage including; stiffening of the trabeculae and subchondral bone, elevated BMD and deformities/altered biomechanics of the femoral head and neck (Baker-LePain and Lane, 2012; Bobinac et al, 2013; Arden and Nevitt, 2006; Sun et al, 2008) Both in osteoporosis and osteoarthritis there may be influence of changes of bone material properties. There is evidence for deterioration in bone material properties with age (Zioupos and Currey, 1998; Burstein et al, 1976; Nalla et al, 2006; Koester et al, 2011; Jepsen, 2003), a risk factor for both osteoporosis and osteoarthritis, there is surprisingly limited research whether these properties deteriorate as a function of these two pathologies

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