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Resumen de Computational Determination of the Critical Microcrack Size That Causes a Remodeling Response in a Trabecula: A Feasibility Study

Amit Gefen, Ron Neulander

  • Bone is a living tissue, which undergoes continuous renewal to repair local defects. Two separate processes, adaptation and remodeling, are involved when a defect appears. The defect produces stress concentrations that provoke regional adaptation, and is gradually repaired, first by resorption and then by deposition of new bone. Using a mathematical formulation of the adaptation mechanism in trabeculae of cancellous bone, we hypothesize that in some cases, where a microcrack is small enough relative to the dimensions of the trabecula, the adaptation response of the whole trabecula may be sufficient to regain homeostatic mechanical conditions (with no need for a remodeling process). The simulation results showed that for trabeculae with nominal length of 900 µm and nominal thickness of 80¿800 µm, a microcrack with minimal length of 48 µm and minimal depth of 13% of the trabecula¿s thickness was required to initiate a remodeling process. A longer (100 µm) but shallower (depth of 7% of the trabecula¿s thickness) crack also triggered remodeling. These computational results support our hypothesis that when a microcrack small enough relative to the dimensions of the trabecula occurs, adaptation of the whole trabecula may be sufficient to regain homeostatic mechanical conditions with no need for a local remodeling process.


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