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  4. High-speed photography of human trabecular bone during compression
 
conference paper

High-speed photography of human trabecular bone during compression

Thurner, P. J.
•
Erickson, B.  
•
Schriock, Z.
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Fratzl, P.
•
Landis, W. J.
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2005
Structure and Mechanical Behavior of Biological Materials
Symposium on Structure and Mechanical Behavior of Biological Materials held at the 2005 MRS Spring Meeting

The mechanical properties of healthy and diseased bone tissue are extensively studied in mechanical tests. Most of this research is motivated by the immense costs of health care and social impacts due to osteoporosis in post-menopausal women and the aged. Osteoporosis results in bone loss and change of trabecular architecture, causing a decrease in bone strength. To address the problem of assessing local failure behavior of bone, we combined mechanical compression testing of trabecular bone samples with high-speed photography. In this exploratory study, we investigated healthy, osteoarthritic, and osteoporotic human vertebral trabecular bone compressed at high strain rates simulating conditions experienced in individuals during falls. Apparent strains were found to translate to a broad range of local strains. Moreover, strained trabeculae were seen to whiten with increasing strain. We hypothesize that the effect seen is due to microcrack formation in these areas, similar to stress whitening seen in synthetic polymers. From the results of a motion energy filter applied to the recorded movies, we saw that the whitened areas are, presumably, also of high deformation. We believe that this method will allow further insights into bone failure mechanisms, and help toward a better understanding of the processes involved in bone failure.

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Type
conference paper
DOI
10.1557/PROC-874-L1.2
Web of Science ID

WOS:000232487800015

Author(s)
Thurner, P. J.
Erickson, B.  
Schriock, Z.
Langan, J.
Scott, J.
Zhao, M.
Fantner, G. E.  
Turner, P.
Kindt, J. H.
Schitter, G.
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Editors
Fratzl, P.
•
Landis, W. J.
•
Wang, R.
•
Silver, F. H.
Date Issued

2005

Published in
Structure and Mechanical Behavior of Biological Materials
Series title/Series vol.

MRS Proceedings; 874

Start page

97

End page

102

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LBNI  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
Symposium on Structure and Mechanical Behavior of Biological Materials held at the 2005 MRS Spring Meeting

San Francisco, CA

MAR 29-31, 2005

Available on Infoscience
November 5, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/56752
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