I would now like to see these
testing methods now applied to the bones of long lived reptiles that reach ages
of a couple of centuries to discover what is different in their make up. It is certain that our bones become brittle
and its cause is not obvious.
Again this is surely a neglected
area of research that will be well remedied over the next decade. We are now seeing a sharp increase of healthy
productive elderly citizens whose bone strength has suddenly become important.
At the same time, bone strength among the elderly varies widely presumably a
function of youthful stress and effort.
Thus we can expect more on this
topic.
The brittleness of aging bones
01 September 2011
More than a loss of bone mass
It is a well-established fact that as we grow older our bones become
more brittle and prone to fracturing. It is also well established that loss of
mass is a major reason for older bones fracturing more readily than younger
bones, hence medical treatments have focused on slowing down this loss.
However, new research from scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy
(DOE)’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) shows that at
microscopic dimensions, the age-related loss of bone quality can be every
bit as important as the loss of quantity in the susceptibility of bone to fracturing.
Using a combination of x-ray and electron based analytical techniques
as well as macroscopic fracture testing, the researchers showed that the
advancement of age ushers in a degradation of the mechanical properties of
human cortical bone over a range of different size scales. As a result, the
bone’s ability to resist fracture becomes increasingly compromised. This
age-related loss of bone quality is independent of age-related bone mass loss.
“In characterizing age-related structural changes in human cortical
bone at the micrometer and sub micrometer scales, we found that these changes
degrade both the intrinsic and extrinsic toughness of bone,” says Berkeley Lab materials
scientist Robert Ritchie. “Based on multiscale structural and mechanical tests,
we attribute this degradation to a hierarchical series of coupled mechanisms
that start at the molecular level.”
Ritchie, who holds joint appointments with Berkeley Lab’s Materials
Sciences Division and the University of California (UC) Berkeley’s Materials
Science and Engineering Department, is the senior author of a paper published
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (PNAS) that
describes this work. The paper is titled “Age-related changes in the plasticity
and toughness of human cortical bone at multiple length scales.”
Human cortical or compact bone is a composite of collagen molecules and
nanocrystals of a mineralized form of calcium called hydroxyapatite (HA).
Mechanical properties of stiffness, strength and toughness arise from both the
characteristic structure at the nanoscale, and at multiple length scales
through the hierarchical architecture of the bone. These length scales extend
from the molecular level to the osteonal structures at near-millimeter levels.
An osteon is the basic structural unit of compact bone, comprised of a central
canal surrounded by concentric rings of lamellae plates, through which bone
remodels.
“Mechanisms that strengthen and toughen bone can be identified at most
of these structural length scales and can be usefully classified, as in many
materials, in terms of intrinsic toughening mechanisms at small length scales,
promoting non-brittle behavior, and extrinsic toughening mechanisms at larger
length scales acting to limit the growth of cracks,” Ritchie says. “These
features are present in healthy, young human bone and are responsible for its
unique mechanical properties. However, with biological aging, the ability of
these mechanisms to resist fracture deteriorates leading to a reduction in bone
strength and fracture toughness.”
Working with the exceptionally bright beams of x-rays at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced
Light Source (ALS), Ritchie and his colleagues analyzed bone samples that
ranged in age between 34 and 99 years. In situ small-angle x-ray scattering
and wide-angle x-ray diffraction were used to characterize the mechanical
response of the collagen and mineral at the sub micrometer level. A combination
of x-ray computed tomography and in situ fracture-toughness
measurements with a scanning electron microscope were used to characterize
effects at micrometer levels.
“We found that biological aging increases non-enzymatic cross-linking
between the collagen molecules, which suppresses plasticity at nanoscale
dimensions, meaning that collagen fibrils can no longer slide with respect to
one another as a way to absorb energy from an impact,” Ritchie says. “We also
found that biological aging increases osteonal density, which limits the
potency of crack-bridging mechanisms at micrometer scales.”
These two mechanisms that act to reduce bone toughness are coupled,
Ritchie says, in that the increased stiffness of the cross-linked collagen
requires energy to be absorbed by “plastic” deformation at higher structural
levels, which occurs by the process of micro cracking.
“With age, remodeling of the bone can lead the osteons to triple in
number, which means the channels become more closely packed and less effective
at deflecting the growth of cracks,” he says. “This growing ineffectiveness
must be accommodated at higher structural levels by increased micro cracking.
In turn, the increased micro cracking compromises the formation of crack
bridges, which provide one of the main sources of extrinsic toughening in bone
at length scales in the range of tens to hundreds of micrometers. Thus,
age-related changes occur across many levels of the structure to increase the
risk of fracture with age.”
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