Elsevier

Journal of Biomechanics

Volume 24, Issue 5, 1991, Pages 317-325, 327-329
Journal of Biomechanics

Mechanical properties of metaphyseal bone in the proximal femur

https://doi.org/10.1016/0021-9290(91)90350-VGet rights and content

Abstract

We used a three-point bending test to investigate the structural behavior of 123 rectangular flat plate specimens harvested from the metaphyseal shell of the cervical and intertrochanteric regions of five fresh/frozen human proximal femora. For comparison purposes, 36 specimens of similar geometry were also fabricated from bone of the femoral diaphysis. All specimens were oriented in either the local longitudinal or transverse directions. The mean longitudinal elastic modulus was 9650 ± 2410 (SD) MPa and demonstrated a 24% decrease from that measured for the diaphysis (12500 ± 2140 MPa) using the same testing technique. However, the transverse elastic moduli did not differ significantly between the proximal (5470 ± 1720 MPa) and diaphyseal (5990 ± 1520 MPa) specimens. The globally averaged values for the ultimate tensile strengths of the metaphyseal shell were 101 ± 26 MPa in the longitudinal and 50 ± 12 MPa in the transverse directions. These compared with diaphyseal values of 128 ± 16 MPa and 47 ± 12 MPa, respectively. While these differences were largely due to the reduced density of the proximal specimens, a slight decrease in transverse anisotropy for the proximal specimens was also noted by comparing the ratio of longitudinal to transverse moduli (1.76) and tensile strength (2.02) to the diaphyseal values (2.09 and 2.71, respectively). Use of these data should lead to improved performance of analytical models for the proximal femur, and thus help focus increased attention on the structural contributions of trabecular bone to the strength and rigidity of the proximal femur.

References (17)

There are more references available in the full text version of this article.

Cited by (182)

  • Biomechanical behavior of PMMA 3D printed biomimetic scaffolds: Effects of physiologically relevant environment

    2023, Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
    Citation Excerpt :

    The IWP groups showed substantially higher flexural stiffness (range: 10–71%) and strength (range: 24–72%) when compared with the Primitive specimens of similar as-designed wall-thickness (Fig. 3E–F). In this current study, 3D printed TPMS PMMA-microfilled scaffolds showed flexural stiffness values (Primitive: 160–660 N/mm and IWP: 170–1200 N/mm) within the lower limit of those previously reported for human bone (300–2500 N/mm) (Lotz et al., 1991; Yeh et al., 2019). Fracture mechanisms of the studied 3D printed scaffolds were observed to involve core yielding and buckling, top face sheet compression failure, and bottom face sheet tension failure (Fig. 5).

  • Simple anisotropic model of Bone Adaptation - SAMBA

    2022, Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
  • Limit analysis of human proximal femur

    2021, Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
View all citing articles on Scopus

Current address: Failure Analysis Associated, 149 Commonwealth Dr., Menlo Park, CA 94025, U.S.A.

View full text