2001
DOI: 10.1006/jtbi.2001.2316
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Tensile Fatigue in Bone: Are Cycles-, or Time to Failure, or Both, Important?

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Cited by 71 publications
(64 citation statements)
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“…In some biological tissues, such as tendon, dentin and bone, time-dependent damage may contribute to failure in conditions of repeated loading (Caler and Carter, 1989;Bowman et al, 1998;Zioupos et al, 2001;Nalla et al, 2003;Nalla et al, 2005;Wren et al, 2003). As a result, loading frequency, leading to different total loading times and different amounts of time-dependent damage, sometimes influences or even determines fatigue behavior; that is, the number of cycles to failure for given repeatedly applied stresses (Caler and Carter, 1989;Zioupos et al, 2001;Nalla et al, 2003).…”
Section: Time-dependent Damagementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In some biological tissues, such as tendon, dentin and bone, time-dependent damage may contribute to failure in conditions of repeated loading (Caler and Carter, 1989;Bowman et al, 1998;Zioupos et al, 2001;Nalla et al, 2003;Nalla et al, 2005;Wren et al, 2003). As a result, loading frequency, leading to different total loading times and different amounts of time-dependent damage, sometimes influences or even determines fatigue behavior; that is, the number of cycles to failure for given repeatedly applied stresses (Caler and Carter, 1989;Zioupos et al, 2001;Nalla et al, 2003).…”
Section: Time-dependent Damagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, loading frequency, leading to different total loading times and different amounts of time-dependent damage, sometimes influences or even determines fatigue behavior; that is, the number of cycles to failure for given repeatedly applied stresses (Caler and Carter, 1989;Zioupos et al, 2001;Nalla et al, 2003). Additionally, biological materials may develop creep strains upon repeated application of loadings in fatigue tests (Carter and Caler, 1983;Bowman et al, 1998;Wren et al, 2003).…”
Section: Time-dependent Damagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Immediately after slaughtering, the ten fresh specimens were reamed from corpses, cleaned and sank in physiologic saline 0.009 and kept at 4°C [8,12] . Fresh bone specimens were tested after less than 24 h. For longer intervals, the specimens should be frozen at -20°C in saline soaked gauze and thawed at room temperature just before testing [8,9,12] .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fresh bone specimens were tested after less than 24 h. For longer intervals, the specimens should be frozen at -20°C in saline soaked gauze and thawed at room temperature just before testing [8,9,12] . The other two specimens were preserved in refrigerator, for dry tests.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Examples are so-called stress fractures of foot or leg bones in young soldiers after long unaccustomed foot marches, marathone runners, racehorses or in ballet dancers. [1][2][3][4][5][6] Fatigue failure of bone is also a threat in pathological conditions. For example, femoral head necrosis, due to impaired blood supply for instance because of smoking, leads to fatigue failure of the femoral neck within two years.…”
Section: By Claudia Fleck* and Dietmar Eiflermentioning
confidence: 99%