Joints tutorial Wk 4 Flashcards
Generally, the articular areas of bones are expanded relative to the diaphysis. Explain the benefits of having greater joint surface area.
Increase in contact area –> decrease stress (stress/strain force)
Medial (resist valgus) and lateral surfaces or jt surfaces are wider –> increase moment arm for collateral ligaments (further away from axis)- more efficient
Explain ways in which the coefficient of friction in synovial joints is minimised?
- Lubricates jt surface
- Viscosity- low but not low enough to leave joint
- Fluid film lubrication- pressure mechanism; physical separation of surcaes by pressurised fluid
- Boundary layer lubrication- molecule that adheres to surface
- Roughness of surface
- Cartilage has smooth surface
Describe the mechanisms which may lead to damage of hyaline articular cartilage and discuss the factors that affect the ability of hyaline cartilage to repair.
- Excessive loading
- Put on weight, too much weight= obesity = fatigue failure
- Acute, impulse load (high rapid application)
- Cartilage splits
- Exceeds ultimate stress/strain capacity = acute trauma
- Eg. femoral condyles
- Prologued loading in static position
- Biphasic model (fluid and solid phase)
- When compress, fluid is imcompressible, long term fluid redistributes and moves out
- Altered kinematics
- Tissue is not adapted to force
- Altered kinematics = injury
- Point of contact has shifted
- Immobilisation = lack of mechanical stimulus
- Local inflammation
- Chemicals into synovial fluid affects chondrocytes
Factors that affect repair:
- Poor
- Avascular tissue (cant have inflammation process)
- Aneural
- Low cell density- hard to repair (each cells have large area to “look after, and can’t migrate to injury site)
- Cells have low metabolic rate
- Cant’t migrate to site of injury
- Mechanotransduction is less efficient due as they are isolated
Explain how lower limb biomechanics can contribute to the development and progression of tibiofemoral OA.
Varus
Medial suffers from OA more forces go through –> mechanical line of axis (for load bearing) –> line is medial to middle (medial-lat direction)
Normal is varus –> but load bearing and ground reaction forces (external) will want to increase varus –> increase medial load (eg. tibia adducted compared to femur)
Does not like rapid and uncontrolled application loading
How to improve?
- Balance external varus but target internal muscles of valgus decrease valgus (eg. lateral head of gastron, biceps femoris, Sartorius (some) vastus lateralis, pelvic control- no contralateral pelvic drop)
- Heel strike gets adduction movement
Explain how the arrangement of collagen fibres within a tibiofemoral meniscus relates to the types of stresses that occur during weight-bearing.
- Round condyle
- Shape of meniscus
- Hoop force (semilunar shape)- circumferential forces
- Collagen- irregular proteoglycans
Radial: Inner vs Outer - AF has more type ___ collagen Circumferential: anterior to posterolateral part of discs
I
Intervertebral discs – testing AF: Tensile modulus
- Degeneration does not affect tensile modulus (stiffness)
- Highest tensile modulus (stiffest)- anterior outer
- Most compliant- posterolateral inner
Intervertebral discs – testing AF: Failure stress
- Most stress before failure- AO
- Least stress before failure- PI (common injury site) relative to anterior
- Degeneration will fail under less stress
Intervertebral discs – testing AF: Failure strain
- AF degeneration doesn’t failure strain (not deforming abnormal)
- Inner parts strains more before failure
- AF- energy under cure
Intervertebral discs – testing AF: Strain energy density to failure
- Cope with less energy before failure (degenerative)
- Same stiffness