Publications by authors named "A Keith Pilkey"

Accurate measurement of cancellous bone's apparent elastic modulus, E, is confounded by the experimental artefacts created when trabeculae are severed during specimen preparation. Although standardized axial testing protocols have been developed to deal with the so-called "end effects" caused by severed trabeculae at the loading surfaces, much less attention has been given to the "side effects" around the periphery and the specimen size dependence they create. Two models (one theoretical, one empirical) have been proposed in the literature to predict the reduction in E with decreasing specimen diameter.

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Cancellous bone is an anisotropic structure with architectural and mechanical properties that vary due to both skeletal site and disease state. This anisotropy means that, in order to accurately and consistently measure the mechanical properties of cancellous bone, experiments should be performed along the primary mechanical axis (PMA), that is, the orientation in which the mechanical properties are at their maximum value. Unfortunately, some degree of misalignment will always be present, and the magnitude of the resulting error is expected to be architecture dependent.

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Skeletal fractures, including those resulting from osteoporosis, result in significant healthcare and societal costs on an annual basis. Therefore, it is important to understand the mechanisms by which these fractures occur. Incremental compression testing combined with micro-CT imaging has been used to visualize the progression of failure in trabecular bone samples; however, these studies have ignored the potential contributions of the cortical shell.

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Dehydration is known to cause an increase in the elastic modulus of bone tissue. However, it also causes structural changes (i.e.

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In cancellous bone testing of cored samples, side artifacts are the underestimation of the true (i.e. in situ) mechanical properties due to the severing of the trabecular network during specimen preparation.

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