Regional and Fiber Orientation Dependent Shear Properties and Anisotropic Modeling of Bovine Meniscus

Author(s):  
Adam C. Abraham ◽  
Christian R. Edwards ◽  
Gregory M. Odegard ◽  
Tammy L. Haut Donahue

The meniscus is a multiphase material composed of interstitial water, collagen, glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), and fibrochondrocytes [2, 9]. The microstructure of the meniscus consists of superficial randomly orientated fibers providing a smooth lubricating surface, with the deep portion containing circumferentially oriented fibers intermixed with sparse radial tie fibers [12]. This layered morphology evokes an anisotropic material response with regard to axial, radial and circumferential directions relative to primary collagen fibril orientations [1, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13]. In addition to intrinsic fiber orientation influencing mechanical differences in meniscal tissue, GAG and water content have previously been shown to be regionally dependent within the meniscus, elucidating provincial specificity of the applied stress distribution within the joint.

2022 ◽  
Vol 171 ◽  
pp. 108634
Author(s):  
Nicolas Hadjipantelis ◽  
Ben Weber ◽  
Craig Buchanan ◽  
Leroy Gardner

1976 ◽  
Vol 16 (74) ◽  
pp. 309-310 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Röthlisberger

Abstract Recent measurements of the water level (pressure head) in drill holes and natural moulins on two glacier tongues in Switzerland (Oberaletschgletscher and Gornergletscher) have confirmed that in those holes which link up to a well developed subglacial drainage system the daily piezometric fluctuations are in the order of 100 m (10 bar) and more. From the fact that it is relatively easy to establish such links (in our experiments at ice depths between 150 and 300 m), it is implied that an extended network of subglacial channels and cavities will be subjected to equally large pressure fluctuations with a mean water pressure considerably below the mean ice pressure at the bed. The scope of the present paper is to discuss some of the thermal effects of the low water pressure and its fluctuations. The effect in the ice—assuming temperate ice with a certain water content—is a positive temperature anomaly around the channel, in accordance with the stress field. The radial temperature profile in the ice around a conduit with a circular cross-section follow's directly from the solution for the stress field, and the heat flux can be deduced, allowing for the ice flow towards the conduit. Pressure changes in the conduit cause a rapid change of temperature (with an associated change in water content) and a related change in heat and ice flow. In the case of a channel or cavity at the glacier bed, the temperature fluctuation produced in the channel and the surrounding ice propagates into the substratum. With rising water pressure, i.e. falling temperature, the substratum becomes a heat source and some melting will occur at the ice/rock interface in a fringe zone around channels and cavities. It is this process which may help to explain the increased sliding component of glacier motion at the time of high melt-water run-off. Another intriguing question is what happens in a highly permeable substratum (shattered rock, moraine) at some distance away from a channel. The temperature profile is determined by the pressure melting point within the glacier down to the bed, and the positive geothermal gradient with increasing depth in the substratum below. The water pressure in the substratum is approximately equal to that in the channel, that is to say well below the mean pressure at the glacier bed. There is therefore an uppermost layer of the substratum at a temperature below the freezing temperature of the interstitial water, implying that the water must be frozen in this layer. This is one way to look at the problem. Starting out from the impermeable frozen layer it may be argued that the water film at the glacier bed is at a high pressure and the interstitial ice should melt until the water breaks through at the lower freezing boundary. This could only happen where and as long as there is no appreciable drainage of the water film and interstitial water. As soon as the water breaks through, the pressure will drop and presumably just enough leakage will be sustained to lead to a pressure drop across the frozen layer in accordance with the temperature profile. A generally impermeable glacier bed results as a most likely model, with permeable bands along subglacial drainage channels and eventual leakage holes in between. Taking the pressure fluctuations into account, one finds that temperature fluctuations have to be expected originating at the lower boundary of the frozen substratum, involving frost cycles. The erosive effectiveness of these will however be limited to the equivalent of the pressure cycles. (A double pressure amplitude of 130 m of water head corresponds roughly to a double temperature amplitude of 0.1 deg.)


Author(s):  
Deborah R. Oppenheim

Seasonal changes in the assemblage structure of dominant epipelic diatoms were studied along a transect crossing a salt marsh, sandflat, and mudflat of an estuarine intertidal shore at Berrow Flats, Somerset, UK. Seasonal changes in cell numbers displayed different patterns in the salt marsh and sandflat/mudflat. At salt marsh sites highest numbers of individuals were recorded in summer followed by a smaller autumn growth, while in the sandflat lower numbers showed no seasonal pattern. Repeated annual patterns in the succession of taxa were not observed as environmental conditions changed at the study site with time. Measurements of salinity, pH, interstitial water content, air and soil temperature were taken together with the diatom samples. A canonical correspondence analysis was employed to relate seasonal changes in assemblage structure to measured environmental variables. Total percentage variation in the first four axes of the species/site-environmental biplots ranged between 54 and 66°. In winter, sites and species separated most significantly along gradients of salinity and levels of organic matter. In spring and autumn, interstitial water content became a more significant environmental variable. By summer steep gradients in pH, levels of organic matter, and hypersaline conditions separated sites and assemblages into more discrete groups when compared to the more even spread of points in the other seasons. The results indicate that different combinations of environmental variables influence diatom assemblage structure seasonally.


1980 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 114-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Patrick ◽  
S Selvadurai ◽  
R. Harland Kempthorne

This note presents an experimental study of the plane strain – contact stress distribution beneath a rigid footing resting on a compacted soft cohesive soil medium. The immediate contact stress distribution was found to be highly dependent on the magnitude of the applied stress relative to the ultimate bearing capacity of the foundation. At low levels of applied stress the contact stresses were substantially higher at regions adjacent to the footing edges. As the applied stresses were increased, the contact stresses achieved a more uniform configuration.


2021 ◽  
pp. 106098
Author(s):  
Manjun Li ◽  
Chao Zhang ◽  
Hongyuan Fang ◽  
Mingrui Du ◽  
Zhan Su ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Andy Morejon ◽  
Christopher D. Norberg ◽  
Massimiliano De Rosa ◽  
Thomas M. Best ◽  
Alicia R. Jackson ◽  
...  

The meniscus is crucial in maintaining knee function and protecting the joint from secondary pathologies, including osteoarthritis. The meniscus has been shown to absorb up to 75% of the total load on the knee joint. Mechanical behavior of meniscal tissue in compression can be predicted by quantifying the mechanical parameters including; aggregate modulus (H) and Poisson modulus (ν), and the fluid transport parameter: hydraulic permeability (K). These parameters are crucial to develop a computational model of the tissue and for the design and development of tissue engineered scaffolds mimicking the native tissue. Hence, the objective of this study was to characterize the mechanical and fluid transport properties of human meniscus and relate them to the tissue composition. Specimens were prepared from the axial and the circumferential anatomical planes of the tissue. Stress relaxation tests yielded the H, while finite element modeling was used to curve fit for ν and K. Correlations of moduli with water and glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) content were investigated. On average H was found to be 0.11 ± 0.078 MPa, ν was 0.32 ± 0.057, and K was 2.9 ± 2.27 × 10−15 m4N−1s−1. The parameters H, ν, and K were not found to be statistically different across compression orientation or compression level. Water content of the tissue was 77 ± 3.3% while GAG content was 8.79 ± 1.1%. Interestingly, a weak negative correlation was found between H and water content (R2 ~ 34%) and a positive correlation between K and GAG content (R2 ~ 53%). In conclusion, while no significant differences in transport and compressive properties can be found across sample orientation and compression levels, data trends suggest potential relationships between magnitudes of H and K, and GAG content.


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