Authors
Judith Piet, Seyed Ali Elahi, Amir Esrafilian, Falk Mielke, Maarten Van Nuffel, Gustavo A Orozco, Sanne Vancleef, Rik Lories, Rami K Korhonen, Peter Aerts, Sam Van Wassenbergh, Ilse Jonkers
Publication date
2024
Journal
bioRxiv
Pages
2024.06. 27.601039
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Description
Objective
Altered mechanical loading is a known risk factor for osteoarthritis. Destabilization of the medial meniscus (DMM) is a preclinical gold standard model for post-traumatic osteoarthritis and is thought to induce instability and locally increased loading. However, the joint- and tissue-level mechanical environment underlying cartilage degeneration remains poorly documented.
Design
Using a custom multiscale modeling approach, we assessed joint and tissue biomechanics in rats undergoing sham surgery and DMM. High-fidelity experimental gait data were collected in a setup combining biplanar fluoroscopy and a ground reaction force plate. Knee poses and joint-level loading were estimated through musculoskeletal modeling, using bony landmarks, semi-automatically tracked via deep learning on fluoroscopic images, and ground reaction forces. A musculoskeletal model of the rat hindlimb was adapted to represent knee flexion-extension, valgus-varus, and internal-external rotation. The tissue-level cartilage mechanical environment was then spatially estimated, using the musculoskeletal modeling parameters as inputs into a dedicated finite element (FE) model of the rat knee, comprising cartilage and meniscal tissues. Experimental gait data and modeling workflows, including musculoskeletal models and FE meshes, are openly shared through a data repository.
Results
In rats with DMM, the frontal plane knee pose was altered, yet there was no indication of joint-level overloading. Tissue-level mechanical cues typically linked with cartilage degeneration were not increased in the medial tibial cartilage, despite evidence of tissue structural …
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