Microindentation testing and electron probe microanalysis
of cancellous bone
A.M.
Coats, P. Zioupos and R.M. Aspden. Material properties of subchondral
bone from patients with osteoporosis or osteoarthritis by microindentation
testing and electron probe microanalysis.
Calcified Tissue International 73: 66-71, 2003
Cancellous bone from patients with osteoarthritis
(OA) has a reduced material density and appears to be undermineralized.
It is hypothesized that this will result in a reduction in the mechanical
stiffness and strength of the bone matrix. In this study, bone was
obtained from superior and inferior sites, subjected to relatively
high and low loads respectively, from human femoral heads retrieved
after surgery for osteoporotic hip fracture (OP) or for hip arthroplasty
due to osteoarthritis (OA). Microindentation testing was used to
measure the hardness of cancellous bone at various depths from the
subchondral bone plate (Fig. 1). The elemental
composition from immediately adjacent microscopic sites was determined
using electron probe microanalysis (EPMA). Overall, OA bone was
found to have hardness values that were 7% lower than those from
OP bone (Fig. 2). Bone from the inferior site
was harder than that from the superior in both diseases except in
female OP patients. There was no variation with depth below the
subchondral plate. and no difference between sexes. No difference
was found in the composition of the bone from the different disease
groups and no correlation was found between hardness and any of
the composition measurements. Though only an indirect measurement
of stiffness, the reduction in hardness values support the hypothesis
that OA bone has a reduced elastic modulus.
Fig 1. Electron micrograph of
a sample of cancellous bone from a patient with OP showing an indentation
made in the subchondral bone plate. EPMA data were recorded from sites
immediately adjacent to, but not on, each indentation site. The darker
marks surrounding the indentation are pores in the bone and care was
taken to avoid these, and other less visible defects, for EPMA measurements.
Fig 2. Hardness values (mean
and standard deviation) measured by microindentation shown by sex
and site. The global values for OA and OP are shown with error bars
representing the standard deviation.
Department of Orthopaedics, University of
Aberdeen