The Long-Term Residual Effects of Low-Magnitude Mechanical Stimulation on Murine Femoral Mechanics

Author:

Bodnyk Kyle A.1,Kim Do-Gyoon2,Pan Xueliang3,Hart Richard T.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, The Ohio State University, Fontana Labs, 140 West 19th Street, Columbus OH 43210

2. Division of Orthodontics, The Ohio State University, 305 West 12th Avenue, 4088 Postle Hall, Columbus, OH 43210

3. College of Medicine, Biomedical Informatics, The Ohio State University, 1800 Cannon Drive, Columbus, OH 43210

4. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Fontana Labs, The Ohio State University, 140 West 19th Street Columbus, OH 43210

Abstract

Abstract As an alternative to drug treatments, low-magnitude mechanical stimulation (LMMS) may improve skeletal health without potential side effects from drugs. LMMS has been shown to increase bone health short term in both animal and clinical studies. Long-term changes to the mechanical properties of bone from LMMS are currently unknown, so the objective of this research was to establish the methodology and preliminary results for investigating the long-term effects of whole body vibration therapy on the elastic and viscoelastic properties of bone. In this study, 10-week-old female BALB/cByJ mice were given LMMS (15 min/day, 5 days/week, 0.3 g, 90 Hz) for 8 weeks; SHAM did not receive LMMS. Two sets of groups remained on study for an additional 8 or 16 weeks post-LMMS (N = 17). Micro-CT and fluorochrome histomorphology of these femurs were studied and results were published by Bodnyk et al. (2020, “The Long-Term Residual Effects of Low-Magnitude Mechanical Stimulation Therapy on Skeletal Health,” J. Biol. Eng., 14, Article No. 9.). Femoral quasi-static bending stiffness trended 4.2% increase in stiffness after 8 weeks of LMMS and 1.3% increase 8 weeks post-LMMS compared to SHAM. Damping, tan delta, and loss stiffness significantly increased by 17.6%, 16.3%, and 16.6%, respectively, at 8 weeks LMMS compared to SHAM. Finite element models of applied LMMS signal showed decreased stress in the mid-diaphyseal region at both 8-week LMMS and 8-week post-LMMS compared to SHAM. Residual mechanical changes in bone during and post-LMMS indicate that LMMS could be used to increase long-term mechanical integrity of bone.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

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