Mechanical and Architectural Changes in Animal Bone Following Fast Neutron Irradiation
Eduardo Galiano, Jinlu Liu, Beide Ren, Penghao Xu- Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
- Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging
- Epidemiology
Abstract
Damage to healthy bone following exposure to ionizing radiation has been well documented for at least seven decades. Among the reported effects are a transient increase in stiffness and a reduction in breaking strength. These changes have been linked to a decrease in osteoblast proliferation and differentiation, inducing cell cycle arrest, reducing collagen production, and increasing sensitivity to apoptotic agents. In this work, we analyzed some mechanical and structural changes in compact costal bovine bone (Hereford breed, n = 9) subjected to escalating doses of fast neutrons from a 7Li(p,n)7Be reaction. The mean neutron energy was 233 keV with calculated absorbed doses ranging from 0 to 4.05 ± 10% Gy. Samples were subjected to Young’s Modulus (YM) and breaking strength testing with a Universal Testing Machine (UTM). We found an increase in Young’s Modulus and a decrease in breaking strength as functions of increasing dose equivalent. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) revealed trabecular displacement into compact bone in an irradiated sample (D = 4.05 ± 10% Gy), with breaching of the endosteal wall. OCT further revealed a “crack-like” structure across the irradiated sample, potentially consistent with damage from a proton track resulting from an elastic (n,p) reaction. No previous report has been found on mechanical changes in large mammalian bones following fast neutron doses, nor of the OCT imaging of such samples.