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Wireless sensor enables longitudinal monitoring of regenerative niche mechanics during rehabilitation that enhance bone repair. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mechanical loads during activities like walking are key to bone repair, but measuring these forces internally in the body is challenging, hindering effective recovery strategies.
  • Researchers created an implantable strain sensor to measure these forces in real-time while bones heal, revealing that a load-sharing fixator greatly boosts healing outcomes.
  • The study highlights that early mechanical cues significantly influence long-term bone regeneration, suggesting that non-invasive strain sensing could serve as a safer alternative to traditional imaging for assessing bone healing.

Article Abstract

Mechanical loads exerted on the skeleton during activities such as walking are important regulators of bone repair, but dynamic biomechanical signals are difficult to measure inside the body. The inability to measure the mechanical environment in injured tissues is a significant barrier to developing integrative regenerative and rehabilitative strategies that can accelerate recovery from fracture, segmental bone loss, and spinal fusion. Here we engineered an implantable strain sensor platform and longitudinally measured strain across a bone defect in real-time throughout rehabilitation. The results showed that load-sharing permitted by a load-sharing fixator initially delivered a two-fold increase in deformation magnitude, subsequently increased mineralized bridging by nearly three-fold, and increased bone formation by over 60%. These data implicate a critical role for early mechanical cues on the long term healing response as strain cycle magnitude at 1 week (before appreciable healing occurred) had a significant positive correlation with the long-term bone regeneration outcomes. Furthermore, we found that sensor readings correlated with the status of healing, suggesting a role for strain sensing as an X-ray-free healing assessment platform. Therefore, non-invasive strain measurements may possess diagnostic potential to evaluate bone repair and reduce clinical reliance on current radiation-emitting imaging methods. Together, this study demonstrates a promising framework to quantitatively develop and exploit mechanical rehabilitation strategies that enhance bone repair.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7585453PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bone.2020.115311DOI Listing

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