what do you think when you hear the word biomechanics?

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What do you think when you hear the word biomechanics?

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Page 1: What do you think when you hear the word biomechanics?

What do you think when you hear the word biomechanics?

Page 2: What do you think when you hear the word biomechanics?

What are some subdisciplines of bionechanics?

Page 3: What do you think when you hear the word biomechanics?

Advanced Biomechanics of Physical Activity (KIN 831)

Lecture 1

Biomechanics of Bone

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Single Joint System*

Dr. Eugene W. Brown

Department of Kinesiology

Michigan State University

* Material included in this presentation is derived primarily from two sources:

Enoka, R. M. (1994). Neuromechanical basis of kinesiology. (2nd ed.). Champaign, Il: Human Kinetics.

Nordin, M. & Frankel, V. H. (1989). Basic Biomechanics of the Musculoskeletal System. (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: Lea

& Febiger.

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Components of a Single Joint System

• Rigid Link (Bone, Tendon, Ligament)

• Joint

• Muscle

• Neuron

• Sensory Receptor

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Purpose of Bone?

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Some Purposes of Bone• Provides mechanical support

• Produces red blood cells

• Protects internal organs

• Provides rigid mechanical links and muscle attachment sites

• Facilitates muscle action and body movement

• Serves as active ion reservoir for calcium and phosphorus

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Wolff’s Law

“Every change in the form and function of a bone or of their function alone is followed by certain definitive secondary alteration in their external conformation, in accordance with mathematical laws”.

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Composition and Structure of Bone

• Consists of cells and an organic extracellular matrix of fibers and ground substance

• High content of inorganic materials (mineral salts combined with organic matrix)– Organic component flexible and resiliant – Inorganic component hard and rigid

• Mineral portion of bone primarily calcium and phosphate (minerals 65-70% of dry weight)

• Bone is reservoir for essential minerals (e.g., calcium)

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Composition and Structure of Bone

• Collagen– Mineral salts embedded in variously oriented protein

collagen (strength in various directions) in extracellular matrix

– Tough and pliable, resists stretching– 95% of extracellular matrix (25-30%) of dry weight

of bone

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Schematic illustration of section of the shaft of long bone without inner marrow

Concentric layers of mineralized matrix that surround a central canal containing blood vessels and nerves

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•Haversian canal – small canal at center of each osteon containing blood vessels and nerve cells

•Lamellae - concentric layers of mineralized matrix surrounding haversian canal

•Lacunae – small cavities at boundaries of each lamella containing one bone cell or osteocyte

•Canaliculi – small channels that radiate from lacuna connecting lacunae of adjacent lamellae and reaching havesrian canal

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•Cement line

-limit of canaliculi

-collagen fibers in bone matrix do not cross cement line

-weakest portion of bone’s microstructure

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Microscopic-macroscopic structure of bone. Data form Rho et al., 1998.

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What are the types of bone?

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Two Types of Bone

• compact (or cortical) bone – outer shell, dense structure, surrounds cancellous bone

• Cancellous (or trabicular) bone– Does not contain haversion canals– contains red bone marrow in spaces

--------------------------------------------------------• Biomechanical properties are similar; differ

in porosity and density (see figure)• Quantity of compact and cancellous tissue in

bone differs by function

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Two Types of Bone

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Two Types of Bone

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Periosteum

• Dense fibrous membrane that surrounds bone; outer layer permeated by blood vessels and nerve fibers that pass into cortex via Volkmann’s canals

• Inner osteogenic layer contains osteocytes (generate new bone) and osteoblasts (bone repair)

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Endosteum

• Lines medullary cavityof long bones, filled with yellow fatty marrow

• Contains osteoblasts and osteoclasts (resorption of bone)

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Biphasic Behavior of Bone

• Minerals hard and rigid

• Collagen and ground substance resilient

--------------------------------------------------------

Combination stronger than either alone

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Load Deformation Testing

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Load Deformation Curve• B – max. load

before deformation

• D’ – deformation before structural change

• Area under curve is force x distance = work= energy

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Load Deformation Curve• Slope of elastic region defines stiffness• Area under curve defines energy that can be

stored• Elastic region – return to original

configuration once load is removed• Plastic region – deformation of material• Load deformation curve is usefull when

determining comparative characteristics of whole structures (e.g., bone, tendon, cartilage, ligaments)

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What is the function of normalization?

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What is the function of normalization?

• Independent of geometry of material

• Permits comparison of different materials (e.g., bone, tendons, cartilage, ligaments)

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What are some examples of normalization?

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Normalizing Load

• Stress – force/area

• Strain – length change/initial length (unitless value)– Two types of strain

• Linear – causes change in length

• Shear – causes change in angular relations (radians)

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Stress-Strain Relationships

• Similar to load deformation curve

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Stress-Strain Relationships

Elastic modulus (Young’s modulus) – slope of the stress-strain curve in the elastic region (measure of stiffness)

Plastic modulus – slope of the stress-strain curve in the plastic region

Area under stress strain curve is measure of energy absorbed

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Relationships of Age to Stress-Strain Characteristics of Bone

indirect relation between age and energy absorption

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Cortical vs. Cancellous Bone

• Cortical bone stiffer, withstand greater stress but less strain before failure

• Cancellous bone fractures when strain exceeds 75%

• Cortical bone fractures when strain exceeds 2%

• Cancellous bone has larger capacity to store energy

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Properties of Stiffness and Brittle/Ductile

Interpretation?

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Properties of Stiffness and Brittle/Ductile•Metal – large plastic region

•Virtually no plastic region in glass

•Stress-strain curve of bone not linear

•Yielding of bone tested in tension caused by debonding of osteons at cement lines and microfractures

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Ductile and Brittle Fracture

•Young bone more ductile

•Bone more brittle at higher loading rates

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Load-deformation Relationships

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Typical Response of Long Bone to Loads

• greatest resistance to compression

• weakest response to shear loads

• intermediate strength for tension

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Typical Response of Long Bone to Loads

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Safety Factor

• Safety factor - bones are 2 to 5 times stronger than forces they commonly encounter in activities of daily living; bone strength and stiffness are greatest in the direction in which loads are most commonly imposed (see figure)

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Physiologic Area

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What is Wolff’s Law?

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Remodeling of Bone• Wolff’s Law• Remodeling – balance between bone

absorption of osteoclasts and bone formation by osteoblasts – osteoporosis –increase porosity of bone,

decrease in density and strength, increase in vulnerability to fractures

– piezoelectric effect – electric potential created when collagen fibers in bone slip relative to one another, facilitates bone growth

– use of electric and magnetic stimulation to facilitate bone healing

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Factors Influencing the Dynamic Response of Bone

• Mechanical properties of bone

• Geometry

• Loading mode

• Rate of loading

• Frequency of loading

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Factors Influencing the Dynamic Response of Bone

• Result of loading of bone in transverse and longitudinal directions dissimilar (anisotrophy)

• Bone tends to be strongest in directions most commonly loaded

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  Behavior of bone under tension, compression, bending, shear,

torsion, and combined loading

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Behavior of Bone Under Tension

• under tensile loading structure lengthens and narrows

• equal and opposite loads applied outward

• maximum tensile stress occurs on a plane perpendicular to the applied load (see figure)

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Tensile Loading

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Behavior of Bone Under Tension

• failure mechanism is mainly debonding of cement lines and pulling out of the osteons (see figure)

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Failure Under Tensile Loading

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Behavior of Bone Under Tension• clinically tensile fractures produced in

bones with a large portion of cancellous bone

• example: contraction of the triceps surae on the calcaneous (see figure)

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Tensile Fracture of Calcaneous

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Behavior of Bone Under Compression

• under compression structure shortens and widens

• maximum compression stress occurs on plane perpendicular to applied load (see figure)

• equal and opposite forces applies inward

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Compression Loading

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Behavior of Bone Under Compression

• failure mechanism is mainly oblique cracking of osteons (see figure)

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Failure Under Compression Loading

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Behavior of Bone Under Compression

• example: fractures of vertebrae weakened by age

• example: fracture of femoral neck (see figure)

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Failure Under Compression Loading

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Behavior of Bone Under Shear

• deformation occurs internally in an angular manner (see figures)

• load applied parallel to surface of structure

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Shear Loading

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Shear Loading

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Behavior of Bone Under Shear

• note that tensile and compressive loads also produce shear stress (see figure)

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Shear Loading

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Behavior of Bone Under Shear

• shear modulus – stiffness of material under shear loading

• clinically shear fractures are most often seen in cancellous bone

• examples: femoral condyles and tibial plateau

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Behavior of Bone Under Bending

• bending subjects bone to a combination of tension and compression (tension on one side of neutral axis, compression on the other side, and no stress or strain along the neutral axis)

• magnitude of stresses is proportional to the distance from the neutral axis (see figure)

• long bone subject to increased risk of bending fractures

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Bending Loading

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Three Point Bending Load(figure A)

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What examples of three point bending can you provide?

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Three Point Bending

• two equal and opposite moments (see figure A)• failure usually occurs in the middle• since weaker in tension, failure usually initiated in

location of tension; immature bone may fail first in compression

• example: footballer’s fracture in soccer• example: boot top fracture in skiing (see figure)

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Failure Under Three Point Loading

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Four Point Bending

• two force couples (see figure B)

• magnitude of four point bending is same throughout area between force couples

• structure breaks at weakest point

• example:

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Four Point Bending Load(figure B)

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Failure Under Four Point Loading

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Behavior of Bone Under Torsion

• load applied to cause twist about an axis

• magnitude of stress proportional to distance from neutral axis (see figure)

• shear stresses distributed over entire structure

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Torsion Loading

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Behavior of Bone Under Torsion

• maximal shear stresses act on planes parallel and perpendicular to neutral axis

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Bone Load Under Torsion

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Behavior of Bone Under Torsion

• clinically bone fails first in shear with initial crack parallel to neutral axis; second crack along plane of maximum tension

• Example (see slide)

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Failure Under Torsion

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Behavior of Bone Under Combined Loading

• typical loading pattern

– bone subjected to multiple interdependent loads

– irregular geometric pattern

• example: walking and jogging

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Combined Loading of Bone

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Influence of Muscle Activity on Stress Distribution in Bone

• contraction of muscles alter the stress distribution in bone

• contraction may decrease or eliminate tensile stress by producing compressive stress

• contraction may increase compressive stress• example: three point bending of the tibia in skier

falling forward (contraction of the triceps surae reduces tensile stress on posterior side of tibia but increasing compressive stress) (see figure)

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Muscle Activity Changing Stress Distribution

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Rate Dependency in Bone

• bone is viscoelastic – biomechanical behavior varies with the rate at which bone is loaded (rate of applied and removed load)

• high rate of load application - bone stiffer and can store more energy before failure (loads must be within physiologic range) (see figure)

• example: paired tibia

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Rate Dependency Example

• What interpretation can you derive from this slide?

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Rate Dependency Example• amount of energy

stored before failure approximately doubled at higher rate

• load to failure almost doubled

• deformation to failure did not change significantly

• approximately 50% stiffer at higher loading rate

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Rate Dependency of Bone

• high rate loading results in greater energy storage before failure

• Failure after high rate loading results in rapid release of energy and resulting communition of bone and extensive soft tissue damage

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Fatigue of Bone Under Repetitive Load

• fatigue fracture – fracture caused by repeated application of load– Few repetitions at high load– Many repetitions at low load

• pattern of relationship between load and repetitions (see figure)

• Possible for fatigue curve of some materials to be asymptotic (material will not fail under load and frequency being applies)

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Fatigue Fracture Curve

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Comparison of Bone In Vitro and In Vivo

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In Vitro

• fatigue fracture curve not asymptotic

• bone fatigues rapidly when loaded or deformation approaches yield strength (small number of repetitions needed to produce fracture)

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In Vivo

• fatigue process mitigated by self-repairing process

• fatigue fractures result when remodeling process outpaced by fatigue process

• exercise may fatigue muscles and reduce their potential to attenuate load on bone

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Influence of Bone Geometry on Biomechanical Behavior

• tension and compression load to failure proportional to cross-sectional area of bone

• stiffness of bone proportional to cross-sectional area

• area moment of inertia– cross-sectional area– distribution of bone tissue around neutral axis

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Influence of Bone Geometry on Biomechanical Behavior

• In bending beam 3 is stiffest• Beam 3 can withstand highest load because greatest amount of

material distributed at t distance from neutral axis

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Influence of Bone Geometry on Biomechanical Behavior

• Length of bone influences strength and stiffness in bending

• Long bones subject to high bending moments

• Tubular shape increased moment of inertia because tissue is farther from neutral axis

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Page 99: What do you think when you hear the word biomechanics?

Influence of Bone Geometry on Biomechanical Behavior

• Torsion strength and stiffness directly related to cross-sectional area and distribution of bone

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Influence of Bone Geometry on Biomechanical Behavior

• Remodeling – altering size, shape, and structure of bones to meet mechanical demands placed on it (Wolff’s Law)

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Influence of Bone Geometry on Biomechanical Behavior

• Positive correlation between bone mass and body weight

• Weightlessness (space travel) – results in decreased bone mass

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