Vanderoost Jef, van Lenthe G Harry
Jef Vanderoost, G Harry van Lenthe, Biomechanics Section, Department of Mechanical Engineering, KU Leuven, 3001 Leuven, Belgium.
World J Radiol. 2014 Sep 28;6(9):643-56. doi: 10.4329/wjr.v6.i9.643.
The process of bone remodelling plays an essential role in the emergence and maintenance of bone geometry and its internal structure. Osteoclasts are one of the three main bone cell types that play a crucial role in the bone remodelling cycle. At the microstructural level, osteoclasts create bone deficits by eroding resorption cavities. Understanding how these cavities impair the mechanical quality of the bone is not only relevant in quantifying the impact of resorption cavities in healthy bone and normal aging, but maybe even more so in quantifying their role in metabolic bone diseases. Metabolic bone diseases and their treatment are both known to affect the bone remodelling cycle; hence, the bone mechanical competence can and will be affected. However, the current knowledge of the precise dimensions of these cavities and their effect on bone competence is rather limited. This is not surprising considering the difficulties in deriving three-dimensional (3D) properties from two-dimensional (2D) histological sections. The measurement difficulties are reflected in the evaluation of how resorption cavities affect bone competence. Although detailed 3D models are generally being used to quantify the mechanical impact of the cavities, the representation of the cavities themselves has basically been limited to simplified shapes and averaged cavity properties. Qualitatively, these models indicate that cavity size and location are important, and that the effect of cavities is larger than can be expected from simple bone loss. In summary, the dimensions of osteoclast resorption cavities were until recently estimated from 2D measures; hence, a careful interpretation of resorption cavity dimensions is necessary. More effort needs to go into correctly quantifying resorption cavities using modern 3D imaging techniques like micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) and synchrotron radiation CT. Osteoclast resorption cavities affect bone competence. The structure-function relationships have been analysed using computational models that, on one hand, provide rather detailed information on trabecular bone structure, but on the other incorporate rather crude assumptions on cavity dimensions. The use of high-resolution representations and parametric descriptions could be potential routes to improve the quantitative fidelity of these models.
骨重塑过程在骨骼几何形状及其内部结构的形成和维持中起着至关重要的作用。破骨细胞是在骨重塑周期中起关键作用的三种主要骨细胞类型之一。在微观结构层面,破骨细胞通过侵蚀吸收腔来形成骨缺损。了解这些腔如何损害骨骼的力学质量,不仅与量化健康骨骼和正常衰老过程中吸收腔的影响有关,而且在量化它们在代谢性骨病中的作用方面可能更为重要。已知代谢性骨病及其治疗都会影响骨重塑周期;因此,骨骼的力学性能会且将会受到影响。然而,目前对于这些腔的精确尺寸及其对骨骼性能影响的了解相当有限。考虑到从二维(2D)组织学切片推导三维(3D)特性存在困难,这并不奇怪。测量困难体现在对吸收腔如何影响骨骼性能的评估中。尽管通常使用详细的3D模型来量化腔的力学影响,但腔本身的表示基本上仅限于简化形状和平均腔特性。定性地说,这些模型表明腔的大小和位置很重要,并且腔的影响比单纯骨量丢失所预期的要大。总之,直到最近,破骨细胞吸收腔的尺寸都是从二维测量中估计出来的;因此,对吸收腔尺寸进行仔细解释是必要的。需要付出更多努力,使用微计算机断层扫描(micro-CT)和同步辐射CT等现代3D成像技术来正确量化吸收腔。破骨细胞吸收腔会影响骨骼性能。已经使用计算模型分析了结构 - 功能关系,这些模型一方面提供了关于小梁骨结构的相当详细的信息,但另一方面对腔尺寸采用了相当粗略的假设。使用高分辨率表示和参数描述可能是提高这些模型定量精度的潜在途径。