Dechow P C, Hylander W L
Department of Biomedical Sciences, Baylor College of Dentistry, Dallas, Texas 75246, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2000 Aug;112(4):553-74. doi: 10.1002/1096-8644(200008)112:4<553::AID-AJPA9>3.0.CO;2-R.
One important limitation of mechanical analyses with strain gages is the difficulty in directly estimating patterns of stress or loading in skeletal elements from strain measurements. Because of the inherent anisotropy in cortical bone, orientation of principal strains and stresses do not necessarily coincide, and it has been demonstrated theoretically that such differences may be as great as 45 degrees (Cowin and Hart, 1990). Likewise, relative proportions of stress and strain magnitudes may differ. This investigation measured the elastic properties of a region of cortical bone on both the buccal and lingual surfaces of the lower border of the macaque mandible. The elastic property data was then combined with macaque mandibular strain data from published and a new in vivo strain gage experiment to determine directions and magnitudes of maximum and minimum principal stresses. The goal was to compare the stresses and strains and assess the differences in orientation and relative magnitude between them. The main question was whether these differences might lead to different interpretations of mandibular function. Elastic and shear moduli, and Poisson's ratios were measured using an ultrasonic technique from buccal and lingual cortical surfaces in 12 macaque mandibles. Mandibular strain gage data were taken from a published set of experiments (Hylander, 1979), and from a new experiment in which rosette strain gauges were fixed to the buccal and lingual cortices of the mandibular corpus of an adult female Macaca fascicularis, after which bone strain was recorded during mastication. Averaged elastic properties were combined with strain data to calculate an estimate of stresses in the mandibular corpus. The elastic properties were similar to those of the human mandibular cortex. Near its lower border, the macaque mandible was most stiff in a longitudinal direction, less stiff in an inferosuperior direction, and least stiff in a direction normal to the bone's surface. The lingual aspect of the mandible was slightly stiffer than the buccal aspect. Magnitudes of stresses calculated from average strains ranged from a compressive stress of -16.00 GPa to a tensile stress of 8.84 GPa. The orientation of the principal stresses depended on whether the strain gage site was on the working or balancing side. On the balancing side of the mandibles, maximum principal stresses were oriented nearly perpendicular to the lower border of the mandible. On the working side of the mandibles, the orientation of the maximum principal stresses was more variable than on the balancing side, indicating a larger range of possible mechanisms of loading. Near the lower border of the mandible, differences between the orientation of stresses and strains were 12 degrees or less. Compared to ratios between maximum and minimum strains, ratios between maximum and minimum stresses were more divergent from a ratio of 1.0. Results did not provide any major reinterpretations of mandibular function in macaques, but rather confirmed and extended existing work. The differences between stresses and strains on the balancing side of the mandible generally supported the view that during the power stroke the mandible was bent and slightly twisted both during mastication and transducer biting. The calculated stresses served to de-emphasize the relative importance of torsion. On the working side, the greater range of variability in the stress analysis compared to the strain analysis suggested that a more detailed examination of loadings and stress patterns in each individual experiment would be useful to interpret the results. Torsion was evident on the working side; but in a number of experiments, further information was needed to interpret other superimposed regional loading patterns, which may have included parasagittal bending and reverse parasagittal bending.
使用应变片进行力学分析的一个重要局限性在于,难以根据应变测量结果直接估算骨骼元件中的应力或载荷模式。由于皮质骨固有的各向异性,主应变和主应力的方向不一定重合,并且理论上已经证明这种差异可能高达45度(考因和哈特,1990年)。同样,应力和应变大小的相对比例也可能不同。本研究测量了猕猴下颌骨下缘颊侧和舌侧皮质骨区域的弹性特性。然后将弹性特性数据与已发表的猕猴下颌骨应变数据以及一项新的体内应变片实验数据相结合,以确定最大和最小主应力的方向和大小。目的是比较应力和应变,并评估它们在方向和相对大小上的差异。主要问题是这些差异是否可能导致对下颌功能的不同解释。使用超声技术在12个猕猴下颌骨的颊侧和舌侧皮质表面测量了弹性模量、剪切模量和泊松比。下颌骨应变片数据来自一组已发表的实验(海兰德,1979年),以及一项新实验,在该实验中,将应变花固定在成年雌性食蟹猕猴下颌体的颊侧和舌侧皮质上,然后在咀嚼过程中记录骨应变。将平均弹性特性与应变数据相结合,以计算下颌体应力的估计值。弹性特性与人类下颌皮质的相似。在猕猴下颌骨下缘附近,纵向方向最硬,上下方向较软,垂直于骨表面的方向最软。下颌骨的舌侧比颊侧稍硬。根据平均应变计算出的应力大小范围从-16.00 GPa的压应力到8.84 GPa的拉应力。主应力的方向取决于应变片位置是在工作侧还是平衡侧。在平衡侧,最大主应力几乎垂直于下颌骨下缘。在工作侧,最大主应力的方向比平衡侧更具变化性,表明加载机制的可能性范围更大。在下颌骨下缘附近,应力和应变方向之间的差异为12度或更小。与最大和最小应变之比相比,最大和最小应力之比与1.0的比值差异更大。结果并未对猕猴下颌功能进行任何重大的重新解释,而是证实并扩展了现有工作。下颌骨平衡侧应力和应变之间的差异总体上支持了这样一种观点,即在动力冲程期间,下颌骨在咀嚼和传感器咬合过程中都会弯曲并略有扭转。计算出的应力有助于淡化扭转的相对重要性。在工作侧,与应变分析相比,应力分析中更大的变异性范围表明,在每个单独的实验中更详细地检查载荷和应力模式将有助于解释结果。扭转在工作侧很明显;但在许多实验中,需要更多信息来解释其他叠加的区域加载模式,其中可能包括矢状旁弯曲和反向矢状旁弯曲。