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The mechanical consequences of load bearing in the equine third metacarpal across speed and gait: the nonuniform distributions of normal strain, shear strain, and strain energy density
Author(s) -
Rubin Clinton T.,
Seeherman Howard,
Qin YiXian,
Gross Ted S.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fj.12-216804
Subject(s) - strain (injury) , strain energy density function , strain gauge , gait , materials science , stride , strain energy , biomechanics , mechanical energy , shear (geology) , weight bearing , finite element method , composite material , structural engineering , anatomy , medicine , physics , power (physics) , surgery , physical medicine and rehabilitation , quantum mechanics , engineering
Distributions of normal strain, shear strain, and strain energy density (SED) were determined across the midshaft of the third metacarpal (MCIII, or cannon bone) of 3 adult thoroughbred horses as a function of speed and gait. A complete characterization of the mechanical demands of the bone made through the stride and from mild through the extremes of locomotion was possible by using three 3‐element rosette strain gauges bonded at the diaphyseal midshaft of the MCIII and evaluating the strain output with beam theory and finite element analysis. Mean ± sd values of normal strain, shear strain, and SED increased with speed and peaked during a canter (–3560 ±380 microstrain, 1760 ±470 microstrain, and 119±23 kPa, respectively). While the location of these peaks was similar across animals and gaits, the resulting strain distributions across the cortex were consistently nonuniform, establishing between a 73‐fold (slow trot) to a 330‐fold (canter) disparity between the sites of maximum and minimum SED for each gait cycle. Using strain power density as an estimate of strain history across the bone revealed a 154‐fold disparity between peak and minimum at the walk but fell to ~32‐fold at the canter. The nonuniform, minimally varying, strain environment suggests either that bone homeostasis is mediated by magnitude‐independent mechanical signals or that the duration of stimuli necessary to establish and maintain tissue integrity is relatively brief, and thus the vast majority of strain information is disregarded.—Rubin, C. T., Seeherman, H., Qin, Y.‐X., Gross, T. S., The mechanical consequences of load bearing in the equine third metacarpal across speed and gait: the nonuniform distributions of normal strain, shear strain, and strain energy density. FASEB J. 27, 1887–1894 (2013). www.fasebj.org