The role of synovial fluid filtration by cartilage in lubrication of synovial joints—III. Squeeze-film lubrication: Axial symmetry under low loading conditions

1995 ◽  
Vol 28 (10) ◽  
pp. 1193-1198 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Hlaváček ◽  
J. Novák
2013 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 111-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tamer Mahmoud Tamer

ABSTRACT Synovial fluid is a viscous solution found in the cavities of synovial joints. The principal role of synovial fluid is to reduce friction between the articular cartilages of synovial joints during movement. The presence of high molar mass hyaluronan (HA) in this fluid gives it the required viscosity for its function as lubricant solution. Inflammation oxidation stress enhances normal degradation of hyaluronan causing several diseases related to joints. This review describes hyaluronan properties and distribution, applications and its function in synovial joints, with short review for using thiol compounds as antioxidants preventing HA degradations under inflammation conditions.


Author(s):  
J Q Yao ◽  
A Unsworth

The asperity lubrication in human joints is examined in the present paper, with particular reference to the tertiary undulation with wavelengths of around 20–45 μm. It was found that, under dynamic physiological loading conditions, the secondary waviness of the cartilaginous surface (typically 0.5 mm wavelength) could be effectively flattened to sustain a fluid film of 0.1–0.3 μm thick, while the tertiary waviness could be squashed to sustain a much thinner fluid film of 0.01 μm (10 nm) thick with normal synovial fluid as the lubricant. The calculated film thickness for the tertiary undulation was less than 5 nm when the ankle joint was lubricated by Ringer's solution or pathological synovial fluids, or when only quasi-static loading conditions were considered, while a sufficiently thick fluid film could still be formed when the secondary undulations were considered alone. It was thus suggested that the fluid film lubrication mechanism was operative for human joints with normal synovial fluid as the lubricant under physiological dynamic loading conditions and the mixed lubrication mechanism could take over when static loading conditions prevailed or when watery lubricants (n ≈ 0.001 Pas) were used.


2010 ◽  
Vol 132 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
David F. James ◽  
Garret M. Fick ◽  
W. Douglas Baines

A new mechanism of physiological lubrication is proposed to explain how low-viscosity synovial fluid prevents articular surfaces from contacting and wearing. The new mechanism is based on the hypothesis that the hyaluronic acid chains in synovial fluid bind to the cartilage surfaces through electrostatic charges, with the phospholipid layer on an articular surface supplying the necessary attractive charges. The stationary hyaluronic acid network causes a large hydrodynamic resistance to outward flow from the gap. To determine the effectiveness of the network in preventing contact, squeeze-film flow between two incompressible, permeable disks is analyzed when a constant load is suddenly applied, and the solvent—synovial fluid minus the hyaluronic acid—escapes through the network and through the permeable disks. The analysis yields the approximate time for the gap distance to decrease to asperity size. For realistic physiological parameters, the time for the surfaces to contact is a minimum of several minutes and likely much longer. The role of albumin in the synovial fluid is included because the large protein molecules are trapped by the small openings in the hyaluronic acid network, which increases the flow resistance of the network and thereby delays contact of the surfaces.


2005 ◽  
Vol 127 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miroslav Hlava´cˇek

Squeeze-film lubrication of the human ankle joint during walking is numerically analyzed, the effect of surface sliding being neglected at this stage. Biphasic mixture models are considered for synovial fluid (an ideal and viscous fluid phases) and for articular cartilage (an ideal interstitial fluid and an elastic porous matrix). In the model, the ideal fluid phase passes through the articular surface and matrix pores. The cartilage matrix is considered both normal and pathological (with primary osteoarthrosis). Calculations show that water and small solutes of synovial fluid imbibe into the articular cartilage during the stance period, while the interstitial fluid of the cartilage exudes and enriches the lubricant during the swing period in a central part of the contact at each step. Soon after the onset of walking, repeatedly near the load culmination of each step, the synovial fluid should be turned into a synovial gel and, shortly after, changed back again into a fluid there. In the pathological case, the protective synovial gel layer is quickly depleted after several steps and the surfaces may come briefly into contact in each cycle. With normal cartilage, however, the protective intermittent gel film (formed briefly at each step) maintains its thickness for a longer time. Normal cartilage also behaves more favorably, when a long walk is broken and then resumed shortly afterwards. With normal articular cartilage, maintenance of a lubricating fluid film is much aided by the cyclic nature of the loading encountered in walking, compared with the steady loading in standing where the fluid film is quickly filtered out into a protective permanent gel film.


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