Journal of biomechanics
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Journal of biomechanics · Sep 2002
A mechano-regulation model for tissue differentiation during fracture healing: analysis of gap size and loading.
Bone has a capability to repair itself when it is fractured. Repair involves the generation of intermediate tissues, such as fibrous connective tissue, cartilage and woven bone, before final bone healing can occur. The intermediate tissues serve to stabilise the mechanical environment and provide a scaffold for differentiation of new tissues. ⋯ This mechano-regulatory scheme was tested by simulating healing in fractures with different gap sizes and loading magnitudes. The appearance and disappearance of the various tissues found in a callus was similar to histological observation. The effect of gap size and loading magnitude on the rate of reduction of the interfragmentary strain was sufficiently close to confirm the hypothesis that tissue differentiation phenomena could be governed by the proposed mechano-regulation model.