TY - JOUR
T1 - Mechanical basis of bone strength
T2 - Influence of bone material, bone structure and muscle action
AU - Hart, Nicolas H.
AU - Nimphius, S.
AU - Rantalainen, T.
AU - Ireland, A.
AU - Siafarikas, A.
AU - Newton, R. U.
PY - 2017/9/1
Y1 - 2017/9/1
N2 - This review summarises current understanding of how bone is sculpted through adaptive processes, designed to meet the mechanical challenges it faces in everyday life and athletic pursuits, serving as an update for clinicians, researchers and physical therapists. Bone’s ability to resist fracture under the large muscle and locomotory forces it experiences during movement and in falls or collisions is dependent on its established mechanical properties, determined by bone’s complex and multidimensional material and structural organisation. At all levels, bone is highly adaptive to habitual loading, regulating its structure according to components of its loading regime and mechanical environment, inclusive of strain magnitude, rate, frequency, distribution and deformation mode. Indeed, the greatest forces habitually applied to bone arise from muscular contractions, and the past two decades have seen substantial advances in our understanding of how these forces shape bone throughout life. Herein, we also highlight the limitations of in vivo methods to assess and understand bone collagen, and bone mineral at the material or tissue level. The inability to easily measure or closely regulate applied strain in humans is identified, limiting the translation of animal studies to human populations, and our exploration of how components of mechanical loading regimes influence mechanoadaptation.
AB - This review summarises current understanding of how bone is sculpted through adaptive processes, designed to meet the mechanical challenges it faces in everyday life and athletic pursuits, serving as an update for clinicians, researchers and physical therapists. Bone’s ability to resist fracture under the large muscle and locomotory forces it experiences during movement and in falls or collisions is dependent on its established mechanical properties, determined by bone’s complex and multidimensional material and structural organisation. At all levels, bone is highly adaptive to habitual loading, regulating its structure according to components of its loading regime and mechanical environment, inclusive of strain magnitude, rate, frequency, distribution and deformation mode. Indeed, the greatest forces habitually applied to bone arise from muscular contractions, and the past two decades have seen substantial advances in our understanding of how these forces shape bone throughout life. Herein, we also highlight the limitations of in vivo methods to assess and understand bone collagen, and bone mineral at the material or tissue level. The inability to easily measure or closely regulate applied strain in humans is identified, limiting the translation of animal studies to human populations, and our exploration of how components of mechanical loading regimes influence mechanoadaptation.
KW - Adaptation
KW - Frequency
KW - Injury
KW - Load
KW - Magnitude
KW - Rate
KW - Strain
KW - Tolerance
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85028763243&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85028763243
SN - 1108-7161
VL - 17
SP - 114
EP - 139
JO - Journal of Musculoskeletal Neuronal Interactions
JF - Journal of Musculoskeletal Neuronal Interactions
IS - 3
ER -