School of Applied Sciences, London South Bank University, London SE1 0AA, UK.
Institute of Medical and Biomedical Education, St George's University of London, London SW17 0RE, UK.
Bone. 2018 Jan;106:204-210. doi: 10.1016/j.bone.2017.10.022. Epub 2017 Nov 6.
A subgroup of patients suffering with vertebral fractures can develop progressive spinal deformities over time. The mechanism underlying such clinical observation, however, remains unknown. Previous studies suggested that creep deformation of the vertebral trabeculae may play a role. Using the acoustic emission (AE) technique, this study investigated effects of bone damage (modulus reduction) on creep behaviours of vertebral trabecular bone. Thirty-seven human vertebral trabeculae samples were randomly assigned into five groups (A to E). Bones underwent mechanical tests using similar experimental protocols but varied degree of bone damage was induced. Samples first underwent creep test (static compressive stress of 0.4MPa) for 30min, and then were loaded in compression to a specified strain level (0.4%, 1.0%, 1.5%, 2.5%, and 4% for group A to E, respectively) to induce different degrees of bone damage (0.4%, no damage control; 1.0%, yield strain; 1.5%, beyond yield strain, 2.5% and 4%, post-ultimate strains). Samples were creep loaded (0.4MPa) again for 30min. AE techniques were used to monitor bone damage. Bone damage increased significantly from group A to E (P<0.05), with >30% of modulus reduction in group D and E. Before compressive loading, creep deformation was not different among the five groups and AE hits in creep test were rare. After compressive loading, creep deformation was significantly greater in group D and E than those in other groups (P<0.05). The number of AE hits and other AE measurements during creep test were significantly greater in group D and E than in group A, B, and C (P<0.05 for all). Data suggested that with the increase of vertebral trabecular bone damage, substantial creep deformation may occur even when the vertebra was under physiological loads. The boosted creep deformation observed may be attributed to newly created trabecular microfractures. Findings provide a possible explanation as to why some vertebral fracture patients develop progressive spinal deformity over time.
患有椎体骨折的患者亚组随时间推移可出现进行性脊柱畸形。然而,这种临床观察的潜在机制尚不清楚。先前的研究表明,椎体小梁的蠕变变形可能起作用。本研究使用声发射(AE)技术研究了骨损伤(模量降低)对椎体小梁骨蠕变行为的影响。将 37 个人类椎体小梁样本随机分为五组(A 至 E)。骨骼采用类似的实验方案进行力学测试,但诱导的骨损伤程度不同。样本首先进行蠕变测试(0.4MPa 的静态压缩应力)30min,然后在压缩下加载至特定应变水平(0.4%、1.0%、1.5%、2.5%和 4%分别用于 A 至 E 组),以诱导不同程度的骨损伤(0.4%,无损伤对照;1.0%,屈服应变;1.5%,超过屈服应变,2.5%和 4%,极限应变后)。样本再次进行 30min 的蠕变加载(0.4MPa)。使用 AE 技术监测骨损伤。从 A 组到 E 组,骨损伤显著增加(P<0.05),D 组和 E 组的模量降低超过 30%。在压缩加载之前,五组之间的蠕变变形没有差异,蠕变测试中的 AE 击发很少。在压缩加载后,D 组和 E 组的蠕变变形明显大于其他组(P<0.05)。D 组和 E 组在蠕变测试中的 AE 击发数量和其他 AE 测量值明显大于 A、B 和 C 组(所有 P<0.05)。数据表明,随着椎体小梁骨损伤的增加,即使在椎体处于生理负荷下,也可能发生大量的蠕变变形。观察到的蠕变变形增加可能归因于新形成的小梁微骨折。研究结果提供了一种可能的解释,即为什么一些椎体骨折患者随时间推移会出现进行性脊柱畸形。