| Literature DB >> 24897411 |
Ian J Wallace1, Brigitte Demes2, Carrie Mongle1, Osbjorn M Pearson3, John D Polk4, Daniel E Lieberman5.
Abstract
Functional interpretations of limb bone structure frequently assume that diaphyses adjust their shape by adding bone primarily across the plane in which they are habitually loaded in order to minimize loading-induced strains. Here, to test this hypothesis, we characterize the in vivo strain environment of the sheep tibial midshaft during treadmill exercise and examine whether this activity promotes bone formation disproportionately in the direction of loading in diaphyseal regions that experience the highest strains. It is shown that during treadmill exercise, sheep tibiae were bent in an anteroposterior direction, generating maximal tensile and compressive strains on the anterior and posterior shaft surfaces, respectively. Exercise led to significantly increased periosteal bone formation; however, rather than being biased toward areas of maximal strains across the anteroposterior axis, exercise-related osteogenesis occurred primarily around the medial half of the shaft circumference, in both high and low strain regions. Overall, the results of this study demonstrate that loading-induced bone growth is not closely linked to local strain magnitude in every instance. Therefore, caution is necessary when bone shaft shape is used to infer functional loading history in the absence of in vivo data on how bones are loaded and how they actually respond to loading.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24897411 PMCID: PMC4045900 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0099108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Tibial midshaft cross sections.
The sedentary control sheep (subject 4) and the exercised sheep (subject 3) had similar body masses throughout the experiment. The calcein labels injected after the first week of the exercise treatment are visible as the light grey rings within the sections. Scale equals 1 mm.
Figure 2Bone strain and bone formation.
(A) Mean distribution of peak longitudinal normal strain (µε) across the tibial mid-diaphysis during treadmill exercise. The neutral axis (NA) is dashed with compressive and tensile strain isopleths plotted parallel to it. Maximal compressive strains (negative sign) were produced on the posterior shaft surface, and maximal tensile strains were produced on the anterior shaft surface. (B) Tibial midshaft cross section subdivided into 16 equal-angle sectors positioned about the neutral axis, with the axis orthogonal to the neutral axis projected through the area centroid. (C) Distribution of periosteal bone added in exercised animals and sedentary controls during the experimental period (means + SD). Asterisks indicate statistically significant (P<0.05) differences between exercised animals and controls as determined by two-sample Wilcoxon tests. Numbers indicate percent difference between the mean of the exercised animals relative to the control mean.