Bone lengthening and bone transport are regeneration
processes that commonly rely on distraction osteogenesis,
a widely accepted surgical procedure to deal with
numerous bony pathologies. Despite the extensive study in
the literature of the influence of biomechanical factors, a lack
of knowledge about their mechanobiological differences
prevents a clinical particularization. Bone lengthening treatments
were performed on sheep metatarsus by reproducing
the surgical and biomechanical protocol of previous bone
transport experiments. Several in vivo monitoring techniques
were employed to build an exhaustive comparison: gait
analysis, radiographic and CT assessment, force measures
through the fixation, or mechanical characterization of the
new tissue. A significant initial loss of the bearing capacity,
quantified by the ground reaction forces and the limb contact
time with the ground, is suffered by the bone lengthening
specimens. The potential effects of this anomaly on the
musculoskeletal force distribution and the evolution of the
bone callus elastic modulus over time are also analyzed.
Imaging techniques also seem to reveal lower bone volume in
the bone lengthening callus than in the bone transport one,
but an equivalent mineralization rate. The simultaneous
quantification of biological and mechanical parameters
provides valuable information for the daily clinical routine
and numerical tools development.