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Quantitative assessment and mechanical consequences of bone density and microstructure in hip osteoarthritis

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a chronic, painful, and currently incurable disease characterized by structural deterioration and loss of function of synovial joints. OA is known to involve profound changes in bone density and microstructure near to, and even distal to, the joint. The prevailing view is that these changes in density and microstructure serve to stiffen the subchondral region thereby altering the mechanical environment (stresses and strains) within the epiphyseal and metaphyseal bone, and that these alterations trigger the aberrant cellular signaling and tissue damage characteristic of the progression of OA. Critically, however, these alterations in mechanical environment have never been well documented in a quantitative fashion in hip OA. Separately, although OA is generally thought to be inversely associated with fragility fracture, recent data challenge this idea and suggest that OA may actually modulate which regions of the proximal femur are at risk of fracture. Therefore, the goal of this work was to provide a spatial assessment of bone density and microstructure in hip OA and then examine the mechanical consequences of these OA-related abnormalities throughout the proximal femur.

First, micro-computed tomography and data-driven computational anatomy were used to examine 3-D maps of the distribution of bone density and microstructure in human femoral neck samples with increasing severity of radiographic OA, providing evidence of the heterogeneous and multi-faceted changes in hip OA and discussion of the implications for OA progression and fracture risk. Second, the feasibility of proton density-weighted MRI in image-based finite element (FE) modeling, to examine stress, strain, and risk of failure in the proximal femur under sideways fall, was assessed by comparison to the current standard of CT-based FE modeling. Third, phantom-less calibration for CT-based FE modeling was used with clinically available pre-operative patient scans to assess bone strength and failure risk of the proximal femur in hip OA.

Overall, the results of this work provide a rich, quantitative definition of the ways in which the bone mechanical environment under traumatic loading differ in association with hip OA, and then highlight the potential for clinical image-based FE methods to be used opportunistically to assess bone strength and failure risk at the hip. This work is significant because it directly tests the long-standing premise that OA is associated with changes in the mechanical environment of the bone tissue in ways that are impactful for OA progression; further, this work examines how these changes may influence risk of hip fracture. The results can be used to identify mechanistic predictors of OA progression, to inform development of bone-targeting treatments for OA, and to more broadly understand bone damage and fracture in this population.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/46287
Date30 May 2023
CreatorsAuger, Joshua
ContributorsMorgan, Elise F.
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation
RightsAttribution 4.0 International, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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