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Mechanical properties of the growth plate in a rat model of obesity

Posted on:2017-11-11Degree:M.S.B.M.EType:Thesis
University:The University of Alabama at BirminghamCandidate:Estep, Patrick NeilFull Text:PDF
GTID:2461390011496567Subject:Biomechanics
Abstract/Summary:
Obesity, associated with a number of deleterious health factors, is becoming more common around the world. It has long been thought that obesity affects mechanical properties local to the physis, but no exact relationships have been pinpointed. We have employed shear testing to assess shear forces to fracture and fracture patterns, as well as stress-relaxation indentation testing to assess the properties of distal physeal cartilage in diet-induced obesity in a rat model. The results suggest that a high-fat diet results in a weaker, less flexible, and more brittle physeal structure in shear. The focus of the present work pertains to pediatric cases of Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis (SCFE) and Blount's Disease, two cases in which obesity is thought to affect skeletal growth, as well as cases of severe injury associated with blunt trauma. The findings of this study suggest that regulatory and metabolic changes associated with high-fat diets, particularly in the physeal cartilage, may play a more significant role in the development of physeal fractures than previously thought.;Keywords: Growth Plate, Indentation, Mechanical Properties, Obesity, Physis.
Keywords/Search Tags:Obesity, Mechanical properties, Growth, Physeal
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