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Precision of nanoindentation protocols for measurements of viscoelasticity in cortical and trabecular bone

Author

  • Hanna Isaksson
  • Shijo Nagao
  • Marta Malkiewicz
  • Petro Julkunen
  • Roman Nowak
  • Jukka Jurvelin

Summary, in English

Abstract in Undetermined
Nanoindentation has recently gained attention as a characterization technique for mechanical properties of biological tissues, such as bone, on the sub-micron level. However, optimal methods to characterize viscoelastic properties of bones are yet to be established. This study aimed to compare the time-dependent viscoelastic properties of bone tissue obtained with different nanoindentation methods. Bovine cortical and trabecular bone samples (n=8) from the distal femur and proximal tibia were dehydrated, embedded and polished. The material properties determined using nanoindentation were hardness and reduced modulus, as well as time-dependent parameters based on creep, loading-rate, dissipated energy and semi-dynamic testing under load control. Each loading protocol was repeated 160 times and the reproducibility was assessed based on the coefficient of variation (CV). Additionally, three well-characterized polymers were tested and CV values were calculated for reference.

The employed methods were able to characterize time-dependent viscoelastic properties of bone. However, their reproducibility varied highly (CV 9–40%). The creep constant increased with increasing dwell time. The reproducibility was best with a 30s creep period (CV 18%). The dissipated energy was stable after three repeated load cycles, and the reproducibility improved with each cycle (CV 23%). The viscoelastic properties determined with semi-dynamic test increased with increase in frequency. These measurements were most reproducible at high frequencies (CV 9–10%). Our results indicate that several methods are feasible for the determination of viscoelastic properties of bone material. The high frequency semi-dynamic test showed the highest precision within the tested nanoindentation protocols.

Publishing year

2010

Language

English

Pages

2410-2417

Publication/Series

Journal of Biomechanics

Volume

43

Issue

12

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Orthopedics

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1873-2380