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. 2008 Jul;26(7):951-6.
doi: 10.1002/jor.20573.

Compressive moduli of the human medial meniscus in the axial and radial directions at equilibrium and at a physiological strain rate

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Free article

Compressive moduli of the human medial meniscus in the axial and radial directions at equilibrium and at a physiological strain rate

Helena N Chia et al. J Orthop Res. 2008 Jul.
Free article

Abstract

The axial and radial compressive moduli of the human meniscus are important material properties in tibiofemoral joint models, but they have not been determined previously for fresh-frozen tissue. Our goals were to measure the moduli at equilibrium and at a physiological strain rate, to determine whether the axial and radial compressive moduli are equal for each type of loading, and to determine whether they depend on the region (i.e., anterior, middle, posterior) of the meniscus. Samples from each region from 10 fresh-frozen human medial menisci were tested in unconfined compression at four strain levels (3%, 6%, 9%, and 12%) at 32%/s, a strain rate determined to be physiologically relevant to walking, and then allowed to reach equilibrium in stress relaxation. At equilibrium, the axial and radial compressive moduli at 12% strain were 83.4 kPa and 76.1 kPa, respectively (p = 0.58), whereas at the physiological strain rate, the axial and radial compressive moduli at 12% strain were 718 kPa and 605 kPa, respectively (p = 0.61). At the physiological strain rate, the modulus increased with increasing strain (79.2 kPa at 3% strain vs. 662 kPa at 12% strain) and the modulus in the anterior region (1,048 kPa at 12% strain) was significantly greater than that in the posterior region (329 kPa at 12% strain) (p = 0.04). Our study supports a plane of isotropy for the material properties of meniscal tissue. However, the material behavior is strongly nonlinear because the compressive modulus is several orders of magnitude smaller than previously reported values for tensile modulus. Further, the compressive modulus depends on the activity of interest (i.e., static such as standing or dynamic such as walking) due to viscoelastic effects, the strain level, and the region of the tissue.

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