AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on evaluating fracture healing in small animals by assessing mechanical integrity in response to treatments, specifically looking into microCT image-derived metrics as potential indicators.
  • It introduces an innovative method that combines biomechanical properties and microCT data through inverse finite element analysis (FEA) to better measure the quality of the healing callus.
  • The findings reveal that the inverse FEA method outperformed traditional microCT metrics in detecting bone healing responses, especially in later healing stages, and highlighted the benefits of mesenchymal stem cells in accelerating healing.

Article Abstract

An important concern in the study of fracture healing is the ability to assess mechanical integrity in response to candidate therapeutics in small-animal systems. In recent reports, it has been proposed that microCT image-derived densitometric parameters could be used as a surrogate for mechanical property assessment. Recently, we have proposed an inverse methodology that iteratively reconstructs the modulus of elasticity of the lumped soft callus/hard callus region by integrating both intrinsic mechanical property (from biomechanical testing) and geometrical information (from microCT) within an inverse finite element analysis (FEA) to define a callus quality measure. In this paper, data from a therapeutic system involving mesenchymal stem cells is analyzed within the context of comparing traditional microCT densitometric and mechanical property metrics. In addition, a novel multi-parameter regression microCT parameter is analyzed as well as our inverse FEA metric. The results demonstrate that the inverse FEA approach was the only metric to successfully detect both longitudinal and therapeutic responses. While the most promising microCT-based metrics were adequate at early healing states, they failed to track late-stage mechanical integrity. In addition, our analysis added insight to the role of MSCs by demonstrating accelerated healing and was the only metric to demonstrate therapeutic benefits at late-stage healing. In conclusion, the work presented here indicates that microCT densitometric parameters are an incomplete surrogate for mechanical integrity. Additionally, our inverse FEA approach is shown to be very sensitive and may provide a first-step towards normalizing the often challenging process of assessing mechanical integrity of healing fractures.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3782612PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiomech.2012.05.033DOI Listing

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