| Literature DB >> 30025531 |
Peter Michael Prodinger1, Dominik Bürklein2, Peter Foehr3, Kilian Kreutzer4, Hakan Pilge5, Andreas Schmitt6, Rüdiger V Eisenhart-Rothe7, Rainer Burgkart7, Oliver Bissinger8, Thomas Tischer9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Animal fracture models, primarily performed in rats, are crucial to investigate normal and pathological bone healing. However, results of biomechanical testing representing a major outcome measure show high standard deviations often precluding statistical significance. Therefore, the aim of our study was a systematical examination of biomechanical characteristics of rat femurs during three-point bending. Furthermore, we tried to reduce variation of results by individually adapting the span of bearing and loading areas to the bone's length.Entities:
Keywords: Animal model; Biomechanical testing; Rat fracture studies; Three-point bending; pQCT
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30025531 PMCID: PMC6053723 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-018-2155-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1Biomechanical Testing. a Setup of three-point bending with individual adjustment of breaking and loading bars. Individual adaption of the loading bars is facilitated by a helical wheel (left lower corner). The apparatus is relocatable to keep the breaking bar centred. b Individual adjustment of breaking and loading bars are identical to pQCT measurements. Every specimen was placed onto the flat area of the poplitheal plane (distal supporting bar), which is oriented in the frontal plane anatomically. Contact areas on the supporting bars were point-shaped proximally (just below the lesser trochanter) and either linear-shaped or two point-shaped (in case of prominent tails of the linea aspera) distally. This achieved a stable triangular-shaped bearing under loading, preventing rotational movements during the three-point bending test and standardizing the ap-orientation of the bone. c Rat femurs after mechanical testing, fracture occurred accurately at the predicted percentage
Summary, biomechanical data, individualized-setting group
| Total | Light (< 400 g) | Heavy (> 400 g) | Light vs. Heavy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lenght (mm) | 38.9 (±4.1) | 35.5 (±1.3) | 43.1 (±1.6) | |
| Failure load (N) | 175.4 (±45.2) | 138.1 (±16.38) | 221.0 (±18.95) | p < 0.001 |
| Stiffness (N/mm) | 315.6 (±63.0) | 280.8 (±59.85) | 358.1 (±34.64) |
Means and standard deviations of length, failure load and stiffness. Total and subgroups of light and heavy animals separately
Fig. 2Correlation graphs of failure loads and stiffness values, right versus left femur of each specimen (Bivariate Scattergrams with regression lines and 95% confidence bands). a, b Failure loads of the right versus the left femur. Light rats (> 400 g, a) show a strong correlation. In heavy animals (> 400 g, b) a wide range between both sides was evident. c, d Stiffness values of the right versus the left sides. In light and heavy animals, no correlations between both sides could be seen
Fig. 3Correlation graphs (Bivariate Scattergrams with regression lines and 95% confidence bands). a Femoral DXA BMC (bone mineral content in g) versus pQCT total content (TOT_CNT, blue dots) and cortical content (CRT_CNT, red dots) show a strong correlation of both techniques. b Femoral DXA BMC (bone minerall content in g) versus failure load R2 = 0.89. The correlation between pQCT – values (TOT_CNT and CRT_CNT) is identical
Summary, biomechanical data, comparison between fixed and individualized bending setup
| Fixed Span | Individualized | Fixed vs. Individualized | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weight (g) | 634.5(±26.9) | 641.9 (±55.5) | |
| Length (mm) | 42.9(±1.1) | 43.1(±1.6) | |
| Failure Load (N) | 205.5 (±30.36) | 221.0 (±18.95) | |
| Stiffness (N/mm) | 498.5 (±104.8) | 358.1 (±34.64) |
Means and standard deviations of weight, length, failure load and stiffness. Subgroups of femurs tested with a fixed span and heavy animals tested by the individualized setting. Both groups are not statistically significant different concerning weight or length. Though the fixed-span subgroup seems more homogenous concerning weight and lengths of the femurs, failure loads (tendency) and stiffness values (stat. significant) are more homogenous in the individualized-setting group
Fig. 4Box Plots, Failure loads and Stiffness, adjusted (inidvidualized) setting vs. fixed span during three-point bending. a Failure loads of individual (adjusted) vs. fixed (15 mm) setting during three-point bending. A strong tendency (p = 0.07) to obtain different results by altering the setup was evident. Furthermore, the standard deviation within the sample was lowered by individual adjusted loading bars (18.95 N vs. 30.4 N, see Table 2). b Stiffness values of individual (adjusted) vs. fixed (15 mm) setting during three-point bending. Highly significant difference (p < 0.0001), the standard deviation of the adjusted sample was only about one third compared to fixed bars (34.6 N/mm vs. 104.8 N/mm)