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Chapter 3 - Cartilage Differentiation and Growth

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 January 2010

Dennis R. Carter
Affiliation:
Stanford University, California
Gary S. Beaupré
Affiliation:
VA Palo Alto Health Care System
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Summary

Tendon Development and Fibrocartilage Metaplasia

The soft connective tissues can be considered both histomorphologically and mechanically as a broad range of tissues consisting of various amounts of proteoglycans, water, and structural proteins that are organized with specific ultrastructural arrangements. The composition and ultrastructural organization of these tissues are exquisitely matched to the loading histories to which they are exposed. In general terms, we find that the collagen fiber orientations in fibrous tissues correspond to the predominant direction of in vivo tensile stresses (Figure 3.1). In structures wherein compression is imposed in directions perpendicular to the direction of primary tensile loading, the cells and extracellular matrix manifest the more chondroid character of fibrocartilage. Articular cartilage, on the other hand, is exposed primarily to compressive loading from the joint surface. Since cartilage behaves as a nearly incompressible material at physiologic loading frequencies (1 hz), the adjacent cartilage material effectively provides a tangential compressive stress under the region of contact (Figure 3.1). High hydrostatic pressure is thereby created under the contact area (Figure 2.9). Significant developmental modulations in phenotype, tissue organization, and geometry are possible in tendon, ligaments, menisci, intervertebral discs, articular cartilage, and other soft connective tissue structures. The local mechanical loading history plays a major role in regulating these modifications and thereby “designing” tissues and structures that are matched to their mechanical environment.

To illustrate the role of mechanobiology in dense connective tissue, we can consider the development and adaptation of tendons. During growth and development, tendons will experience changes in both composition and geometry. In particular, progressive increases are observed in the volume fraction of collagen and the size of the tendons.

Type
Chapter
Information
Skeletal Function and Form
Mechanobiology of Skeletal Development, Aging, and Regeneration
, pp. 53 - 72
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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