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  4. In situ measurements of human articular cartilage stiffness by means of a scanning force microscope
 
research article

In situ measurements of human articular cartilage stiffness by means of a scanning force microscope

Imer, R.
•
Akiyama, T.  
•
de Rooij, N. F.  
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2007
Journal of Physics: Conference Series

Osteoarthritis is a painful and disabling progressive joint disease, characterized by degradation of articular cartilage. In order to study this disease at early stages, we have miniaturized and integrated a complete scanning force microscope into a standard arthroscopic device fitting through a standard orthopedic canula. This instrument will allow orthopedic surgeons to measure the mechanical properties of articular cartilage at the nanometer and micrometer scale in-vivo during a standard arthroscopy. An orthopedic surgeon assessed the handling of the instrument. First measurements of the elasticity-modulus of human cartilage were recorded in a cadaver knee non minimal invasive. Second, minimally invasive experiments were performed using arthroscopic instruments. Load-displacement curves were successfully recorded. © 2007 IOP Publishing Ltd.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1088/1742-6596/61/1/094
Author(s)
Imer, R.
Akiyama, T.  
de Rooij, N. F.  
Stolz, M.
Aebi, U.
Kilger, R.
Friederich, N. F.
Wirz, D.
Daniels, A. U.
Staufer, U.
Date Issued

2007

Published in
Journal of Physics: Conference Series
Volume

61

Issue

1

Start page

467

End page

471

Note

406

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
SAMLAB  
Available on Infoscience
May 12, 2009
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/39415
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