The mechanical properties of anterior cruciate bone-ligament-bone
specimens from humans and rhesus monkeys were determined in tension to
failure under high strain-rate conditions. The age range of the human
specimens was from sixteen to eighty-six years. The values fro human
specimens obtained from young adults with regard to elastic modulus,
ultimate tensile stress, and strain energy to failure were approximately
two to three times those for specimens from humans in the sixth decade and
older. The major mode of failure was ligament disruption in the specimens
from young adult humans and avulsion of bone beneath the ligament insertion
site in the specimens from older humans. The difference in mode of failure
correlated with histological observations of decreased bone mass at the
site of ligament attachment in the specimens from older humans. Rhesus
monkey specimens had higher values for elastic modulus, failure stress, and
strain energy. Significant reductions in strength and stiffness properties
of ligament units were shown to occur with advancing age to a greater
degree than expected. All experiments in which specimens from older human
cadavera are used should be interpreted with caution when the results are
applied to mechanisms of ligament failure for younger or athletic
individuals.