Local and global measurements show that damage initiation in articular cartilage is inhibited by the surface layer and has significant rate dependence

局部和全局测量结果表明,关节软骨损伤的起始受到表面层的抑制,并且具有显著的速率依赖性。

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Abstract

Cracks in articular cartilage are a common sign of joint damage, but failure properties of cartilage are poorly understood, especially for damage initiation. Cartilage failure may be further complicated by rate-dependent and depth-dependent properties, including the compliant surface layer. Existing blunt impact methods do not resolve local cartilage inhomogeneities and traditional fracture mechanics tests induce crack blunting and may violate underlying assumptions of linear elasticity. To address this knowledge gap, we developed and applied a method to indent cartilage explants with a sharp blade and initiate damage across a range of loading rates (strain rates 0.5%/s-500%/s), while recording local sample deformation and strain energy fields using confocal elastography. To investigate the importance of cartilage's compliant surface, we repeated the experiment for samples with the surface removed. Bulk data suggest a critical force at which the tissue cuts, but local strains reveals that the deformation the sample can sustain before reaching this force is significantly higher in the surface layer. Bulk and local results also showed significant rate dependence, such that samples were easier to cut at faster speeds. This result highlights the importance of rate for understanding cracks in cartilage and parallels recent studies of rate-dependent failure in hydrogels. Notably, local sample deformation fields were well fit by classical Hookean elasticity. Overall, this study illustrates how local and global measurements surrounding the initiation of damage in articular cartilage can be combined to reveal the importance of cartilage's zonal structure in protecting against failure across physiologically relevant loading rates.

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