Mechanical properties of human trabecular bone lamellae quantified by nanoindentation.

Improved preventive and therapeutic strategies for skeletal diseases such as osteoporosis rely on a better understanding of the mechanical properties of trabecular bone and their influence on cell mediated adaptation processes. The mechanical properties of trabecular bone are determined by composition as well as structural (trabecular architecture), microstructural (trabecular packets) and nanostructural (lamellae) organization. Density is the major predictor of the mechanical properties of trabecular structures and has been extended to the concept of fabric to include architectural anisotropy and improve even further the power of prediction. Recent advances in QCT and MRI technologies allow for precise assessment of 3D trabecular architecture and the mechanical consequences of structural changes can be increasingly well quantified by the means of computational methods. While single trabeculae have been tested using various techniques with contrasting results, little is known about the intrinsic mechanical properties of trabecular bone lamellae on which these computational methods rely. For instance, water and mineral content have a significant effect on the elastic, viscous, yield and postyield properties of bone tissue. In addition, collagen fiber orientation affects the mechanics of single remodeling units. Variations in composition and organization determined by age, accumulated damage or disease may therefore reduce the mechanical integrity of trabecular bone and deserve more attention. The aim of this work was to utilize a nanoindentation technique to quantify elastic modulus and hardness of human trabecular bone lamellae.