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首页> 外文期刊>Journal of Human Evolution >Metacarpal head biomechanics: A comparative backscattered electron image analysis of trabecular bone mineral density in Pan troglodytes, Pongo pygmaeus, and Homo sapiens
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Metacarpal head biomechanics: A comparative backscattered electron image analysis of trabecular bone mineral density in Pan troglodytes, Pongo pygmaeus, and Homo sapiens

机译:掌骨头部生物力学:盘状穴居人,庞哥侏儒和智人小梁骨矿物质密度的反向散射电子图像分析

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Great apes and humans use their hands in fundamentally different ways, but little is known about joint biomechanics and internal bone variation. This study examines the distribution of mineral density in the third metacarpal heads in three hominoid species that differ in their habitual joint postures and loading histories. We test the hypothesis that micro-architectural properties relating to bone mineral density reflect habitual joint use. The third metacarpal heads of Pan troglodytes, Pongo pygmaeus, and Homo sapiens were sectioned in a sagittal plane and imaged using backscattered electron microscopy (BSE-SEM). For each individual, 72 areas of subarticular cortical (subchondral) and trabecular bone were sampled from within 12 consecutive regions of the BSE-SEM images. In each area, gray levels (representing relative mineralization density) were quantified.Results show that chimpanzee, orangutan, and human metacarpal III heads have different gray level distributions. Weighted mean gray levels (WMGLs) in the chimpanzee showed a distinct pattern in which the 'knuckle-walking' regions (dorsal) and 'climbing' regions (palmar) are less mineralized, interpreted to reflect elevated remodeling rates, than the distal regions. Pongo pygmaeus exhibited the lowest WMGLs in the distal region, suggesting elevated remodeling rates in this region, which is loaded during hook grip hand postures associated with suspension and climbing. Differences among regions within metacarpal heads of the chimpanzee and orangutan specimens are significant (Kruskal-Wallis, p < 0.001). In humans, whose hands are used for manipulation as opposed to locomotion, mineralization density is much more uniform throughout the metacarpal head. WMGLs were significantly (p < 0.05) lower in subchondral compared to trabecular regions in all samples except humans. This micro-architectural approach offers a means of investigating joint loading patterns in primates and shows significant differences in metacarpal joint biomechanics among great apes and humans.
机译:大猿和人类以根本不同的方式使用手,但对关节生物力学和内部骨骼变异了解甚少。这项研究检查了三种类人鱼的第三个掌骨头中矿物质密度的分布,这三个类人鱼的惯性关节姿势和装载历史不同。我们检验了与骨矿物质密度有关的微建筑特性反映惯用关节的假设。在矢状平面上切出盘状穴居人,Pongo pygmaeus和智人的第三掌骨头,并使用背散射电子显微镜(BSE-SEM)对其成像。对于每个人,从BSE-SEM图像的12个连续区域内抽取了72个关节下皮质(软骨下)和小梁骨区域。在每个区域中,量化了灰度级(代表相对矿化密度)。结果显示,黑猩猩,猩猩和人类掌骨III头具有不同的灰度级分布。黑猩猩的加权平均灰度级(WMGL)显示了一种明显的模式,其中“指关节行走”区域(背侧)和“攀爬”区域(palmar)的矿化程度较低,这被解释为反映了重塑率高于远端区域。 Pongo pygmaeus在远端区域表现出最低的WMGL,表明该区域的重塑率升高,在与悬吊和攀爬相关的钩抓手姿势中,这种重载率增加。黑猩猩和猩猩的掌骨头部之间的区域之间的差异非常显着(Kruskal-Wallis,p <0.001)。在人类的手(而不是运动)上进行操纵的过程中,整个掌骨头的矿化密度更加均匀。与除人以外的所有小梁区域相比,软骨下WMGLs显着降低(p <0.05)。这种微结构方法为调查灵长类动物的关节负荷模式提供了一种方法,并且显示了大猿猴和人类在掌骨关节生物力学方面的显着差异。

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