Effect of aging on the toughness of human cortical bone: evaluation by R-curves

R.K. Nalla, J. J. Kruzic, J.H. Kinney, R.O. Ritchie

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

220 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Age-related deterioration of the fracture properties of bone, coupled with increased life expectancy, is responsible for increasing incidence of bone fracture in the elderly, and hence, an understanding of how its fracture properties degrade with age is essential. The present study describes ex vivo fracture experiments to quantitatively assess the effect of aging on the fracture toughness properties of human cortical bone in the longitudinal direction. Because cortical bone exhibits rising crack-growth resistance with crack extension, unlike most previous studies, the toughness is evaluated in terms of resistance-curve (R-curve) behavior, measured for bone taken from wide range of age groups (34-99 years). Using this approach, both the ex vivo crack-initiation and crack-growth toughness are determined and are found to deteriorate with age; the initiation toughness decreases some 40% over 6 decades from 40 to 100 years, while the growth toughness is effectively eliminated over the same age range. The reduction in crack-growth toughness is considered to be associated primarily with a degradation in the degree of extrinsic toughening, in particular, involving crack bridging in the wake of the crack.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1240-1246
JournalBone
Volume35
Issue number6
Online published27 Oct 2004
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2004
Externally publishedYes

Research Keywords

  • Aging
  • Cortical bone
  • Fracture toughness
  • R-curve

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