Wallace, L J, et al. “Biomechanical Properties of Canine Corticocancellous Bone Frozen in Normal Saline Solution”. American Journal of Veterinary Research, vol. 56, no. 6, 1995, pp. 822-5, https://scholar2.islandarchives.ca/islandora/object/ir%3A26151.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: Wallace, L J
Author: Griffon, D J
Author: Bechtold, J E
Date Issued
1995
Abstract

Eleven pairs of canine metacarpal bones, 10 pairs of metatarsal bones, and 7 pairs of ribs were harvested cleanly and prepared for banking at -20 C for 1 year. One bone of each pair was randomly assigned to 1 type of storage: plastic pack vs immersion in a normal solution of sodium chloride. The contralateral bone was assigned to the opposite treatment. Six pairs of metacarpal bones and 5 pairs of metatarsal bones were tested in torsion to failure. No significant difference was found within pairs. All ribs, 5 pairs of metacarpal bones, and 5 pairs of metatarsal bones were loaded in 4-point bending to failure. The energy absorbed at failure and the ultimate displacement of ribs and metacarpal and metatarsal bones were increased by 25 to 30% and 18 to 24%, respectively, when the bones were frozen in isotonic saline solution. Corticocancellous grafts frozen in normal saline solution are biomechanically less fragile and brittle than grafts stored in plastic without saline solution.

Note

Type of work: journal article

Date issued: 1995 Jun

Status: imported

Language

  • English

Subjects

  • animals
  • Biomechanical Phenomena
  • Metacarpus -- physiology
  • Organ Preservation
  • CRYOPRESERVATION
  • Transplantation, Homologous
  • Bone and Bones -- physiology
  • Bone Transplantation -- veterinary
  • Stress, Mechanical
  • Dogs
Page range
822-825
Host Title
American journal of veterinary research
Host Abbreviated Title
Am J Vet Res
Volume
56
Issue
6
ISSN
0002-9645
PMID Identifier
7653895