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Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering University of Birmingham

Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

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Page 1: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies

Geoffrey R FulcherDavid WL Hukins

Duncan ET Shepherd

School of Mechanical EngineeringUniversity of Birmingham

Page 2: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Articular cartilage Low friction & wear

Transmitting forces

Deformable: larger areas - lower stress

Page 3: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Articular cartilage Viscoelastic

Behaviour under the full range of physiological loading frequencies?

Page 4: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Rise time of heel strike force

Generally– 100-150 ms

Some people– 5-25 ms

– implicated in the onset of osteoarthritis

Page 5: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

1 Hz– rise time 500 ms

90 Hz– rise time 5.6 ms

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20

Time (ms)

Fo

rce

(N)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800

Time (ms)

Fo

rce

(N)

Page 6: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Objective

To measure the viscoelastic properties of bovine articular cartilage at loading frequencies of up to 90 Hz

Page 7: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Viscoelasticity

Page 8: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Viscoelasticity phase angle of 0°

– material is purely elastic

phase angle of 90°– material is purely viscous

Page 9: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Viscoelastic material Storage modulus, E´

– elastic part of the response (where energy is stored and used for elastic recoil of the specimen when a stress is removed)

Loss modulus, E´´ – the viscous response (where energy is dissipated and

the material flows)

E'

E''δ 1tan

Page 10: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Materials & methods Bovine

Tibial plateau

Fluid bath

Indenter

Page 11: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Materials & methods Bose ElectroForce 3200

testing machine

WinTest

DMA (Dynamic Mechanical Analysis)

Page 12: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Materials & methods sinusoidally varying compressive force of between 16 N

and 36 N

1.7 MPa

1 to 90 Hz

Calculated:– E´– E´´

Page 13: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Results

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Frequency (Hz)

Mo

du

lus

(MP

a) Point 2 storage

Point 3 storage

Point 6 storage

Point 7 storage

Point 2 loss

Point 3 loss

Page 14: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Results

Page 15: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Storage modulus Curve fit

Slope

B)f(logAE e '

f

A

df

dE

'

Page 16: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Phase angle > 0 for all frequencies 1 to 90 Hz

– 3.4 to 5.7° (mean = 4.9°, SD = 0.6°)

Viscoelastic

Page 17: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Implications for osteoarthritis? More energy is stored by the tissue than is

dissipated

Effect is greater at higher frequencies.

Main mechanism for this excess energy to be dissipated is by the formation of cracks

Page 18: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Implications for osteoarthritis?

1 Hz

10 Hz

100 Hz

Page 19: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Conclusions Articular cartilage is viscoelastic 1 to 90 Hz

High frequency loading, seen in some of the population, may be implicated in osteoarthritis

Page 20: Viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage at high frequencies Geoffrey R Fulcher David WL Hukins Duncan ET Shepherd School of Mechanical Engineering

Acknowledgements

Arthritis Research Campaign

Duncan ET Shepherd BEng, PhD, CEng, FIMechE

School of Mechanical EngineeringUniversity of Birmingham

[email protected] www.bioeng.bham.ac.uk