Architecture and trabecular
bone Toward an improved understanding of the biomechanical effects of
age, sex and osteoporosis
T.M. Keaveny and O.C. Yeh
Orthopaedic Biomechanics Laboratory, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University
of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
Abstract
From an engineering perspective, trabecular bone is a highly complex material,
being anisotropic with different strengths in tension, compression, and shear
and with mechanical properties that vary widely across anatomic sites, and with
aging and disease. While mechanical properties depend very much on volume fraction,
the role of architecture and tissue material properties remain uncertain. In
the context of osteoporosis, there is wide interest in the biomechanical role
of architecture
since this should lead to improved understanding of the disease and ultimately
better diagnosis and drug treatment assessment. This study reviews what is known
about architectural changes in trabecular bone associated with age, gender and
osteoporosis and the role of these changes in the mechanical properties of bone.
Recent development of three-dimensional high-resolution imaging technologies
has provided more accurate measures of quantitative metrics of architecture,
thereby providing new data and raising questions about earlier conclusions.
Focusing on the hip and spine, this literature is synthesized and outstanding
issues are identified. In addition, the changing paradigm of biomechanical research
on trabecular architecture is addressed. Because of the complexity of the trabecular
micromechanics, the prevailing approach to date can be classified as an inverse
one, whereby candidate metrics of architecture are developed and tested for
efficacy in an empirical trial-and-error fashion. In this approach, the biomechanics
is treated only as an assay since it is not used to guide development of the
candidate metrics. By contrast, a more forward approach is to study the associated
micromechanics using engineering analysis and from that identify the metrics
that in theory most affect mechanical properties. The latter approach, facilitated
by the new highresolution imaging techniques and increased computational power,
is discussed in an attempt to direct attention to new types of architectural
metrics that are independent of bone density and that should improve the ability
to explain how age, gender and osteoporosis affect the mechanical properties
of trabecular bone.
Keywords: Bone Strength, Biomechanics,
Spine, Cancellous Bone, Aging