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  • Key words: Osteons — X-ray diffraction — Pole figures — Hysteresis loop — Apatite crystallites — Collagen fibrils.  (1)
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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Calcified tissue international 62 (1998), S. 266-273 
    ISSN: 1432-0827
    Keywords: Key words: Osteons — X-ray diffraction — Pole figures — Hysteresis loop — Apatite crystallites — Collagen fibrils.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Physics
    Notes: Abstract. The results of a study on the fine structural distortion due to the two previously observed types of degradation in cyclically loaded single osteons (i.e., stiffness degradation and pinching effect) are presented. Fully calcified longitudinal and alternate osteons were isolated from 350-μm-thick longitudinal sections of human femoral cortical bone. The samples were prepared from 500-μm-long central cylindrical portions of an osteon, whose two ends were penetrating into rectangular lugs for fixation to an electromechanical device that cyclically loaded the samples. This device was connected to a microwave micrometer and a recorder. The structural distortions induced by cyclic loading were investigated by high- and low-angle X-ray diffraction on conventional and synchrotron radiation sources. Cyclic loading results in a reduction in the degree of orientation of apatite crystallites, especially in longitudinal osteons, in which the most abundant longitudinal lamellae are not protected against buckling by transverse lamellae as they are in alternate osteons. In contrast, the degree of orientation of collagen fibrils does not seem to be affected by cycling loading in the two osteon types, possibly because the disorientation of collagen fibrils is, within limits, a reversible process. Finally, the contrast between the disorientation of inorganic crystallites and the apparently unaltered distribution of collagen fibrils suggests that the degradation of cyclically loaded osteons may be due to a separation of the crystallites from the fibrils.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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