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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 6 | Pages 995 - 1002
1 Nov 1997
Ding M Dalstra M Danielsen CC Kabel J Hvid I Linde F

We tested in compression specimens of human proximal tibial trabecular bone from 31 normal donors aged from 16 to 83 years and determined the mechanical properties, density and mineral and collagen content.

Young’s modulus and ultimate stress were highest between 40 and 50 years, whereas ultimate strain and failure energy showed maxima at younger ages. These age-related variations (except for failure energy) were non-linear.

Tissue density and mineral concentration were constant throughout life, whereas apparent density (the amount of bone) varied with ultimate stress. Collagen density (the amount of collagen) varied with failure energy. Collagen concentration was maximal at younger ages but varied little with age.

Our results suggest that the decrease in mechanical properties of trabecular bone such as Young’s modulus and ultimate stress is mainly a consequence of the loss of trabecular bone substance, rather than a decrease in the quality of the substance itself. Linear regression analysis showed that collagen density was consistently the single best predictor of failure energy, and collagen concentration was the only predictor of ultimate strain.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 3 | Pages 468 - 474
1 May 1993
Schuller H Dalstra M Huiskes R Marti R

In acetabular dysplasia, fixation of the acetabular component of a cemented total hip prosthesis may be insecure and superolateral bone grafts are often used to augment the acetabular roof. We used finite element analysis to study the mechanical importance of the lateral acetabular roof and found that the lateral acetabular rim plays an important role in the load transfer of the pelvic bone. When the superlateral rim was lacking, the load shifted to the posterosuperior rim and to the area of pubic support, and the stresses in all materials, especially in the cement and in the trabecular bone, increased greatly. At the cement-bone interface the tilting component of the shear stress increased threefold. In a model in which the dysplastic acetabulum was augmented by a rigidly fixed, load-transmitting bone graft, the stresses were considerably diminished.