| Literature DB >> 29385029 |
Rajesh Kumar1, David M Pierce2, Vidar Isaksen3, Catharina de Lange Davies4, Jon O Drogset5, Magnus B Lilledahl6.
Abstract
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a common joint disorder found mostly in elderly people. The role of mechanical behavior in the progression of OA is complex and remains unclear. The stress-relaxation behavior of human articular cartilage in clinically defined osteoarthritic stages may have importance in diagnosis and prognosis of OA. In this study we investigated differences in the biomechanical responses among human cartilage of ICRS grades I, II and III using polymer dynamics theory. We collected 24 explants of human articular cartilage (eight each of ICRS grade I, II and III) and acquired stress-relaxation data applying a continuous load on the articular surface of each cartilage explant for 1180 s. We observed a significant decrease in Young's modulus, stress-relaxation time, and stretching exponent in advanced stages of OA (ICRS grade III). The stretch exponential model speculated that significant loss in hyaluronic acid polymer might be the reason for the loss of proteoglycan in advanced OA. This work encourages further biomechanical modelling of osteoarthritic cartilage utilizing these data as input parameters to enhance the fidelity of computational models aimed at revealing how mechanical behaviors play a role in pathogenesis of OA.Entities:
Keywords: articular cartilage; biomechanical characterization; osteoarthritis; polymer dynamics; stress-relaxation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29385029 PMCID: PMC5855635 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19020413
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1(a) Stress-relaxation data acquired from 24 cartilage sections; (b) Mean stress-relaxation curve (n = 8 curve) of ICRS grades I, II, and III. Bars represent the standard deviation at the selected time points.
Figure 2Histological images of osteoarthritic articular cartilage stained by Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E). (a) ICRS grade-I; (b) ICRS grade-II; (c) ICRS grade-III.
The characteristic values of osteoarthritic cartilage ICRS grades—I, II and III.
| Sample | Stress-Relaxation Time Constant ( | Instantaneous Young’s Modulus i.e., Yin (at | Equilibrium Young’s Modulus i.e., Yeq (at | Ratio (Yin/Yeq) | Stretching Exponent ( | Histological Grade (OARSI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICRS grade-I | ||||||
| #Section-1 | 211.2 | 6.816 | 6.816 | 2.236544 | 0.6776 | 1 |
| #Section-4 | 136 | 3.426691 | 3.426691 | 3.228219 | 0.6013 | 2 |
| #Section-9 | 382.4 | 4.559351 | 4.559351 | 1.684617 | 0.9331 | 1 |
| #Section-11 | 157.6 | 3.7488 | 3.7488 | 2.005482 | 0.5947 | 2 |
| #Section-13 | 187.6 | 5.797113 | 5.797113 | 1.996035 | 0.631 | 1 |
| #Section-16 | 185.9 | 3.360478 | 3.360478 | 2.039817 | 0.6165 | 2 |
| #Section-19 | 110 | 4.172465 | 4.172465 | 2.493802 | 0.5537 | 1 |
| #Section-21 | 132.5 | 3.910431 | 3.910431 | 2.713876 | 0.5578 | 1 |
| ICRS grade-II | ||||||
| #Section-3 | 116.4 | 3.997535 | 3.997535 | 2.920333 | 0.6004 | 2 |
| #Section-5 | 172.3 | 5.50605 | 5.50605 | 2.475084 | 0.6501 | 2 |
| #Section-7 | 151.3 | 4.317236 | 4.317236 | 2.681396 | 0.6163 | 1 |
| #Section-12 | 64.82 | 4.065479 | 4.065479 | 2.297605 | 0.4867 | 2 |
| #Section-14 | 172 | 3.928383 | 3.928383 | 2.129691 | 0.5743 | 2 |
| #Section-17 | 106.1 | 3.736842 | 3.736842 | 2.126649 | 0.5062 | 2 |
| #Section-20 | 145.3 | 3.421194 | 3.421194 | 2.116525 | 0.6046 | 2 |
| #Section-24 | 161.3 | 3.685106 | 3.685106 | 1.842395 | 0.6004 | 1 |
| ICRS grade-III | ||||||
| #Section-2 | 64.28 | 1.497124 | 0.443423 | 3.376287 | 0.4393 | 3 |
| #Section-6 | 43.52 | 2.203448 | 0.712712 | 3.091636 | 0.4363 | 3 |
| #Section-8 | 55.04 | 4.301901 | 1.327796 | 3.239881 | 0.4687 | 4 |
| #Section-10 | 56.87 | 1.687635 | 0.586799 | 2.876001 | 0.4422 | 3 |
| #Section-15 | 43.9 | 2.677714 | 0.997392 | 2.684714 | 0.4584 | 3 |
| #Section-18 | 111.6 | 2.870444 | 1.288061 | 2.228499 | 0.5566 | 3 |
| #Section-22 | 72.66 | 3.397942 | 1.231759 | 2.758608 | 0.4996 | 4 |
| #Section-23 | 27.74 | 1.927954 | 0.496422 | 3.883696 | 0.4236 | 3 |
Figure 3A relative comparison of (a) instantaneous Young’s modulus (Yin) and (b) equilibrium Young’s modulus (Yeq) between three ICRS grades of human osteoarthritic cartilage. Significant reduction in ‘Yin’ and ‘Yeq’ between grade-I and -III and, grade-II and -III were observed. No significant change between grade-I and -II was observed; (c) A relative comparison of Yin/Yeq between three ICRS grades of human osteoarthritic cartilage. The Young’s modulus ratio represents the vitality of cartilage (the smaller the value, the more healthy the cartilage). Two asterisks ** represent p < 0.01 and one asterisk * represents p < 0.05. + represent the outliers.
Figure 4A relative comparison of (a) stress relaxation times (τ) and (b) stretching-exponent parameter (β) between three ICRS grades of human osteoarthritic cartilage. Significant reduction in ‘τ’ and ‘β’ between grade-I and -III and grade-II and -III were observed. No significant reduction between grade-I and -II was observed. Three asterisks *** represent p < 0.001 and one asterisk * represents p < 0.05. + represent the outliers.
ICRS classification of osteoarthritic cartilage sample. L and M represent lateral and medial femoral condyle section of articular cartilage respectively.
| Cartilage Section | Assignment of ICRS Grdae | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Grade-I ( | Grade-II ( | Grade-III ( | |
| Patient 1 | Section-1 (L) | x | x |
| Patient 2 | x | x | Section-2 (M) |
| Patient 3 | x | Section-3 (L) | x |
| Patient 4 | Section-4 (M) | Section-5 (M) | Section-6 (L) |
| Patient 5 | x | Section-7 (M) | Section-8 (L) |
| Patient 6 | Section-9 (L) | x | Section-10 (M) |
| Patient 7 | Section-11 (L) | Section-12 (M) | x |
| Patient 8 | Section-13 (L) | Section-14 (L) | Section-15 (M) |
| Patient 9 | Section-16 (M) | x | x |
| Patient 10 | x | Section-17 (M) | Section-18 (M) |
| Patient 11 | Section-19 (L) | Section-20 (M) | x |
| Patient 12 | Section-21 (L) | x | Section-22 (M) |
| Patient 13 | x | x | Section-23 (M) |
| Patient 14 | x | Section-24 (L) | x |
Figure 5(a) A photograph of indentation instrument; (b) Indentation was imposed on articular surface of cartilage by a preload; (c) Deformation of articular surface due to applied load and acquisition of stress-relaxation data.