An analysis of the effects of depth-dependent aggregate modulus on articular cartilage stress-relaxation behavior in compression

Citation
Ccb. Wang et al., An analysis of the effects of depth-dependent aggregate modulus on articular cartilage stress-relaxation behavior in compression, J BIOMECHAN, 34(1), 2001, pp. 75-84
Citations number
59
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary
Journal title
JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS
ISSN journal
00219290 → ACNP
Volume
34
Issue
1
Year of publication
2001
Pages
75 - 84
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-9290(200101)34:1<75:AAOTEO>2.0.ZU;2-2
Abstract
An accurate description of the mechanical environment around chondrocytes e mbedded within their dense extracellular matrix (ECM) is essential for the study of mechano-signal transduction mechanism(s) in explant experiments. N ew methods have been developed to determine the inhomogeneous strain distri bution throughout the depth of the ECM during compression (Schinagl et al., 1996, Annals of Biomedical Engineering 24, 500-512; Schinagl et al 1997. J ournal of Orthopaedics Research 15, 499-506) and the corresponding depth-de pendent aggregate modulus distribution (Wang and Mow, 1998. Transactions of the Orthopaedics Research Society 23, 484; Chen and Sah, 1999. Transaction s of the Orthopaedics Research Society 24, 635). These results provide the motivation for the current investigation to assess the influence of tissue inhomogeneity on the chondrocyte milieu in situ, e.g. stress, strain, fluid velocity and pressure fields within articular cartilage. To describe this inhomogeneity, we adopted the finite deformation biphasic constitutive law developed by Holmes and Mow (1990 Journal of Biomechanics 23, 1145-1156). O ur calculations show that the mechanical environment inside an inhomogeneou s tissue differs significantly from that inside a homogeneous tissue. Furth ermore, our results indicate that the need to incorporate an inhomogeneous aggregate modulus, or an anisotropy, into the biphasic theory to describe a rticular cartilage depends largely on the motivation for the study. (C) 200 0 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.