Are distributions of secondary osteon variants useful for interpreting load history in mammalian bones?
Cells Tissues Organs
; 185(4): 285-307, 2007.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-17587802
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND/AIMS:
In cortical bone, basic multicellular units (BMUs) produce secondary osteons that mediate adaptations, including variations in their population densities and cross-sectional areas. Additional important BMU-related adaptations might include atypical secondary osteon morphologies (zoned, connected, drifting, elongated, multiple canal). These variants often reflect osteonal branching that enhances toughness by increasing interfacial (cement line) complexity. If these characteristics correlate with strain mode/magnitude-related parameters of habitual loading, then BMUs might produce adaptive differences in unexpected ways.METHODS:
We carried out examinations in bones loaded in habitual torsion (horse metacarpals) or bending sheep, deer, elk, and horse calcanei, and horse radii. Atypical osteons were quantified in backscattered images from anterior, posterior, medial, and lateral cortices. Correlations were determined between atypical osteon densities, densities of all secondary osteons, and associations with habitual strain mode/magnitude or transcortical location.RESULTS:
Osteon variants were not consistently associated with 'tension', 'compression', or neutral axis ('shear') regions, even when considering densities or all secondary osteons, or only osteon variants associated with relatively increased interfacial complexity. Similarly, marrow- and strain-magnitude-related associations were not consistent.CONCLUSION:
These data do not support the hypothesis that spatial variations in these osteon variants are useful for inferring a habitual bending or torsional load strain history.
Search on Google
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Bone Development
/
Fetus
/
Haversian System
Type of study:
Prognostic_studies
Limits:
Animals
Language:
En
Journal:
Cells Tissues Organs
Journal subject:
ANATOMIA
Year:
2007
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
United States