Impact-induced cartilage damage assessed using polarisation-sensitive optical coherence tomography.

J Mech Behav Biomed Mater

The Dodd-Walls Centre for Photonic and Quantum Technologies, Department of Physics, The University of Auckland, Auckland, 1010, New Zealand.

Published: May 2021

Non-invasive determination of structural changes in articular cartilage immediately after impact and rehydration provides insight into the response and recovery of the soft tissue, as well as provides a potential methodology for clinicians to quantify early degenerative changes. In this study, we use polarisation-sensitive optical coherence tomography (PS-OCT) to examine subtle alterations of the optical properties in healthy and early-stage degenerate articular cartilage immediately after impact loading to identify structurally relevant metrics required for understanding the mechanical factors of osteoarthritic initiation and progression. A custom-designed impact testing rig was used to deliver 0.9 J and 1.4 J impact energies to bovine articular cartilage. A total of 52 (n=26 healthy, n=26 mildly degenerate) cartilage-on-bone samples were imaged before, immediately after, and 3 h after impact. PS-OCT images were analyzed to assess changes relating to surface irregularity, optical attenuation, and birefringence. Mildly degenerate cartilage exhibits a significant change in birefringence following 1.4 J impact energies compared to healthy samples which is believed to be attributable to degenerate cartilage being unable to fully utilise the fluid phase to distribute and dampen the energy. After rehydration, the polarisation-sensitive images appear to 'optically-recover' reducing the reliability of birefringence as an absolute metric. Surface irregularity and optical attenuation encode diagnostically relevant information and may serve as markers to predict the mechanical response of articular cartilage. PS-OCT with its ability to non-invasively image the sub-surface microstructural abnormalities of cartilage presents as an ideal modality for cartilage degeneration assessment and identification of mechanically vulnerable tissue.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmbbm.2021.104326DOI Listing

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