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Determinants of Microdamage in Elderly Human Vertebral Trabecular Bone
Author(s) -
Hélène Follet,
Delphine Farlay,
Yohann Bala,
Stéphanie ViguetCarrin,
Évelyne Gineyts,
Brigitte BurtPichat,
Julien Wegrzyn,
Pierre Delmas,
Georges Boivin,
Roland Chapurlat
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0055232
Subject(s) - trabecular bone , human bone , bone matrix , osteoporosis , bone mineral , trabecular bone score , matrix (chemical analysis) , medicine , chemistry , anatomy , materials science , quantitative computed tomography , cartilage , composite material , biochemistry , in vitro
Previous studies have shown that microdamage accumulates in bone as a result of physiological loading and occurs naturally in human trabecular bone. The purpose of this study was to determine the factors associated with pre-existing microdamage in human vertebral trabecular bone, namely age, architecture, hardness, mineral and organic matrix. Trabecular bone cores were collected from human L2 vertebrae (n = 53) from donors 54–95 years of age (22 men and 30 women, 1 unknown) and previous cited parameters were evaluated. Collagen cross-link content (PYD, DPD, PEN and % of collagen) was measured on surrounding trabecular bone. We found that determinants of microdamage were mostly the age of donors, architecture, mineral characteristics and mature enzymatic cross-links. Moreover, linear microcracks were mostly associated with the bone matrix characteristics whereas diffuse damage was associated with architecture. We conclude that linear and diffuse types of microdamage seemed to have different determinants, with age being critical for both types.

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