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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 28 - 28
22 Nov 2024
Boyce S Nichol T Smith T Le Maitre C
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Aim. Periprosthetic joint infections follow 1-3% of arthroplasty surgeries, with the biofilm nature of these infections presenting a significant treatment challenge. 1. Prevention strategies include antibiotic-loaded bone cement; however, increases in cementless procedures means there is an urgent need for alternative local antimicrobial delivery methods. 2. A novel, ultrathin, silica-based sol-gel technology is evaluated in this research as an anti-infective coating for orthopaedic prosthetic devices, providing local antibiotic release following surgery. Method. Reduction in clinically relevant microbial activity and biofilm reduction by antimicrobial sol-gel coatings, containing a selection of antibiotics, were assessed via disc diffusion and microdilution culture assays using the Calgary biofilm device. 3. Proliferation, morphology, collagen, and calcium production by primary bovine osteoblasts cultured upon antibiotic sol-gel surfaces were examined, and cytotoxicity evaluated using Alamar blue staining and lactate dehydrogenase assays. Concentrations of silica, calcium and phosphorus compounds within the cell layer cultured on sol-gel coatings and concentrations eluted into media, were quantified using ICP-OES. Furthermore, cellular phenotype was assessed using alkaline phosphatase activity with time in culture. Results. Low antibiotic concentrations within sol-gel had an inhibitory effect on clinically relevant biofilm growth, for example 0.8 mg ml. -1. tobramycin inhibited clinically isolated S. aureus (MRSA) growth with an 8-log reduction in viable colony forming units. There was no significant difference in metabolic activity between untreated and sol-gel exposed primary bovine osteoblasts in elution-based assays. Reduction (2-fold) in metabolic activity in direct contact assays after 48 hours exposure was likely to be due to increased osteoinduction, whereas no impact upon cell proliferation were observed (p=0.92 at 14 days culture). The morphology of primary osteoblasts was unaffected by culture on sol-gel coatings and collagen production was maintained. Calcium containing nodule production within bovine osteoblastic cells was increased 16-fold after 14 days culture upon sol-gel. Conclusions. The ultrathin sol-gel coating showed low cytotoxicity, strong biofilm reducing activity and antimicrobial activity, which was comparable to antibiotics alone, demonstrating that sol-gel delivery of antibiotics could provide local antimicrobial effects to inhibit PJI growth without the need for bone cement. Future work will develop and evaluate sol-gel performance in an ex vivo explant bone infection model which will reduce the need for animal experimentation


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 103 - 103
14 Nov 2024
Dhaliwal J Harris S Logishetty K Brkljač M Cobb J
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Introduction. The current methods for measuring femoral torsion have limitations, including variability and inaccuracies. Existing 3D methods are not reliable for abnormal femoral anteversion measurement. A new 3D method is needed for accurate measurement and planning of proximal femoral osteotomies. Currently available software for viewing and modelling CT data lacks measurement capabilities. The MSK Hip planner aims to address these limitations by combining measurement, planning, and analysis functionalities into one tool. We aim to answer 5 key questions: Is there a difference between 2D measurement methods? Is there a difference between 3D measurement methods? Is there a difference between 2D and 3D measurement methods? Are any of the measurement methods affected by the presence of osteoarthritis or a CAM deformity?. Method. After segmentation was carried out on 42 femoral CT scans using Osirix, 3D bone models were landmarked in the MSK lab hip planning software. Murphy's, Reikeras’, McBryde, and the novel MSK lab method were used to measure femoral anteversion. Result. Murphy's method had the lowest mean femoral neck anteversion (FNA) at 24.98°, while the MSK method had the highest at 28.55°. Bland-Altman plots showed systematic errors between 2D (1.201°) and 3D (1.074°) methods. All methods demonstrated good intra- and inter-user reliability. Significant differences were found between measurement methods and between patient groups. Conclusion. The MSK Hip Planner software proved useful and convenient to measure FNA. Statistically significant differences in FNA were observed between the measurement methods, as well as between patient groups when split by presence of osteoarthritis and cam deformity. Complex joint pathology and altered femoral morphology should be considered by clinicians when deciding which method to use when measuring FNA


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 70 - 70
14 Nov 2024
Cicione C Tilotta V Ascione A Giacomo GD Russo F Tryfonidou M Noel D Camus A Maitre CL Vadalà G
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Introduction. Low back pain (LBP) is a worldwide leading cause of disability. This preclinical study evaluated the safety of a combined advanced therapy medicinal product developed during the European iPSpine project (#825925) consisting of mesendoderm progenitor cells (MEPC), derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells, in combination with a synthetic poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) hydrogel (NPgel) in an ovine intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD) model. Method. IDD was induced through nucleotomy in 4 adult sheep, 5 lumbar discs each (n=20). After 5 weeks, 3 alternating discs were treated with NPgel (n=6) or NPgel+MEPC (n=6). Before sacrifice, animals were subjected to: MRI of lumbar spines (disc height and Pfirmann grading); blood sampling (hematological, biochemical, metabolic and lymphocyte/monocytes immunological). After 3 months the sheep were sacrificed. The spines were processed for: macroscopic morphology (Thompson grading), microscopic morphology (Histological grading), and glycosaminoglycan content (GAG, DMMB Assay). Furthermore, at sacrifice biodistribution of human MEPC was assessed by Alu-sequences quantification (qPCR) from three tissue samples of heart, liver, spleen, brain, lungs, and kidneys, and PBMCs collected to assess activation of systemic immune cells. To each evaluation, appropriate statistical analysis was applied. Result. Flow cytometry showed no induction of systemic activation of T cells or monocytes. Alu quantification did not give detection of any cells in any organ. Disc height index was slightly increased in discs treated with NPgel+MEPC. Pfirmann's and Thompson's classification showed that treatment with NPgel or NPgel+MEPC gave no adverse reactions. Histological grading showed similar degeneration in vertebrae treated with NPgel+MEPC or with NPgel alone. The amount of GAG was significantly increased in the nucleus pulposus following treatment with NPgel+MEPC compared to NPgel alone, in which a decrease was observed compared to untreated discs in both nucleus pulposus and annulus fibrosus. Conclusion. This study showed the safety of both NPgel+MEPC and NPgel treatments


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 69 - 69
14 Nov 2024
Sawant S Borotikar B Raghu V Audenaert E Khanduja V
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Introduction. Three-dimensional (3D) morphological understanding of the hip joint, specifically the joint space and surrounding anatomy, including the proximal femur and the pelvis bone, is crucial for a range of orthopedic diagnoses and surgical planning. While deep learning algorithms can provide higher accuracy for segmenting bony structures, delineating hip joint space formed by cartilage layers is often left for subjective manual evaluation. This study compared the performance of two state-of-the-art 3D deep learning architectures (3D UNET and 3D UNETR) for automated segmentation of proximal femur bone, pelvis bone, and hip joint space with single and multi-class label segmentation strategies. Method. A dataset of 56 3D CT images covering the hip joint was used for the study. Two bones and hip joint space were manually segmented for training and evaluation. Deep learning models were trained and evaluated for a single-class approach for each label (proximal femur, pelvis, and the joint space) separately, and for a multi-class approach to segment all three labels simultaneously. A consistent training configuration of hyperparameters was used across all models by implementing the AdamW optimizer and Dice Loss as the primary loss function. Dice score, Root Mean Squared Error, and Mean Absolute Error were utilized as evaluation metrics. Results. Both the models performed at excellent levels for single-label segmentations in bones (dice > 0.95), but single-label joint space performance remained considerably lower (dice < 0.87). Multi-class segmentations remained at lower performance (dice < 0.88) for both models. Combining bone and joint space labels may have introduced a class imbalance problem in multi-class models, leading to lower performance. Conclusion. It is not clear if 3D UNETR provides better performance as the selection of hyperparameters was the same across the models and was not optimized. Further evaluations will be needed with baseline UNET and nnUNET modeling architectures


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 96 - 96
14 Nov 2024
Mahadeshwara MR Pandit H Hall RM Jawad MA Bryant M Gendy RE
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Introduction. Osteoarthritis (OA) occurs due to a multi-scale degradation of articular cartilage (AC) surface which aggravates the disease condition. Investigating the micro-scale structural alterations and mechano-tribological properties facilitates comprehension of disease-mechanisms to improve future injectable-therapies. This study aims to analyze these properties using various experimental and analytical methods to establish correlations between their morpho-physiological features. Method. In this study, Raman-spectroscopy was used to investigate microscale changes in AC constituents and categorize OA damage regions in knee-joint samples from joint replacement patients (Samples = 5 and Regions = 40). Following, microscale indentation and sliding tests were performed on these regions to evaluate variations in aggregate-modulus (AM) and elastic-modulus (EM), with coefficient of friction (COF). Finally, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was employed to analyze these morphological variations. Result. Raman spectroscopy revealed degree of collagen-damage (Amide-3 α-helix to random-coil ratio I-1250/I-1280), proteoglycan-damage (Sulphated bonds SO. 3-. to CH. 2. twist ratio I-1065/I-1206), amount of bone exposure (Phosphated-hydroxyapatite PO. 4. 3-. to Amide-1 ratio I-959/I-1669) and increased crystallinity (Carbonated hydroxyapatite CO. 3. 2-. to Amide-1 ratio I-1075/I-959) in ECM. Subsequently, these regions were categorized into different groups (G) based on these damages; G1 (Proteoglycan); G2 (Collagen + Proteoglycan); G3 (Collagen + Proteoglycan + Carbonated crystallinity) G4 (Collagen or Proteoglycan + bone exposure); and G5 (Collagen + Proteoglycan + Bone exposure). Further experimentation revealed the differences in mechano-tribological properties (AM, EM, and COF) between the different groups. G5 displayed the highest values of AM (1.5 ± 0.2MPa), EM (0.3 ± 0.01MPa) and COF (0.39 ± 0.08), compared to other groups. These altered properties were confirmed via SEM that revealed micro-asperity junctions, superficial fronding, fibrillations and bone exposure at these damaged regions. Conclusion. This study demonstrated micro-scale changes in AC among OA patients commensurate to the degree of tissue damage, which correlates with disease progression altering joint structure and function particularly in regions with high COF


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 98 - 98
14 Nov 2024
Höflsauer SG Bonnaire F Danalache M Feierabend M Hofmann U
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Introduction. Analogous to articular cartilage, changes in spatial chondrocyte organisation have been proposed to be a strong indicator for local tissue degeneration and destruction in the intervertebral disc (IVD). While a progressive structural and functional degradation of the extracellular (ECM) and pericellular (PCM) matrix occurs in osteoarthritic cartilage, these processes have not yet been biomechanically elucidated in the IVD. We aimed to evaluate the local stiffness of the ECM and PCM in the anulus fibrosus of the IVD on the basis of local cellular spatial organisation. Method. Using atomic force microscopy, we measured the elastic modulus of the local ECM and PCM in human disc samples using the spatial chondrocyte patterns as an image-based biomarker. Result. By measuring tissue from 30 patients, we found a significant difference in the elastic moduli of the PCM in clusters when compared to the healthy patterns single cells (p=0.029), pairs (p=0.016), and string formations (p=0.010) whereas the values of the elastic moduli of the ECM only reached statistical significance when clusters were compared with string formations. The ECM/PCM ratio ranged from 0.62 to 0.89. Overall, the reduced elastic moduli in clusters demonstrates that cluster formation is not only a morphological phenomenon describing disc degeneration, but it marks a compromised biomechanical functioning. Conclusion. This study is the first to describe and quantify the differences in the elastic moduli of the ECM in relation to the PCM in the anulus fibrosus of the IVD by means of atomic force microscopy on the basis of spatial chondrocyte organisation. Advanced disc degeneration is accompanied by a biomechanically compromised tissue functioning


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 77 - 77
14 Nov 2024
Zevgolis D
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Introduction. Bereft of their optimal tissue context, cells lose their phenotype, function and therapeutic potential during in vitro culture. Despite the fact that in vivo cells are exposed simultaneously to multiple signals, traditional ex vivo cultures are monofactorial. With these in mind, herein we assessed the combined effect of surface topography, substrate rigidity, collagen type I coating and macromolecular crowding in human tenocyte, skin fibroblast and bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cell cultures. Methods. Thermal imprinted was used to pattern (groove depth: 2,000 nm, groove width: 2,000 nm, line width: 2,000 nm) polydimethylsiloxane substrates of different rigidity (50 kPa, 130 kPa, 1,000 kPa). Grooved and planar substrates were subsequently coated with collagen type I and used to culture the aforementioned cell populations without and with macromolecular crowding (100 μg/ml carrageenan). After 3, 7 and 14 days in culture, cell morphology, viability, metabolic activity, proliferation, protein synthesis and deposition and gene expression analyses were conducted. Results. None of the variables assessed affected cell viability, metabolic activity and proliferation. Surface topography was found to be a potent regulator of cell morphology. Macromolecular crowding significantly increased extracellular matrix deposition, albeit in globular manner independently on whether grooved or planar substrates were used, possibly due to the low dimensionality of the grooves. Gene expression analysis made apparent that the 130 kPa and the 1,000 kPa grooved substrates under macromolecular crowding conditions maintained human tenocyte phenotype and directed human bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells towards tendon-like lineage, respectively. None of the conditions assessed dramatically affected human skin fibroblast fate. Conclusions. Collectively, our data indicate that the physicochemical in vitro microenvironment modulators assessed herein are capable of maintaining human tenocyte phenotype and differentiating human bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells towards tenogenic lineage, but not in trans-differentiating human skin fibroblasts


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 85 - 85
14 Nov 2024
Florit MG Graça AL Domingues RMA Gomes MME
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Introduction. Healthy tendons are mainly composed of aligned collagen hierarchically organized from collagen fibrils to fiber bundles with a scarce cellular population mainly composed of tenocytes and tendon stem/progenitor cells. However, injured tendon acquires a fibrotic state characterized by a loss of ECM alignment and increased cellularization. The lack of reliable 3D models that recreate the organization and microenvironment of healthy and diseased tendons is one of the main obstacles faced by the scientific community. Method. To recreate the architecture of healthy and diseased tendons, electrospun nanofiber scaffolds with anisotropic and isotropic nanotopography were developed. These scaffolds were coated with a shell consisting of cell-laden hydrogels encapsulating human adipose-derived stem cells (hASCs) to include the living component. To show the versatility of the system, extracellular vesicles (EVs) were encapsulated in the hydrogel as biological cues. The living fibers were characterized by microscopy and morphological analysis. The morphology and phenotype of cells was evaluated using microscopy, gene expression analysis and immunostainings for tendon markers. Results. Scaffolds mimicked the native hierarchical structure of tendons and size of tendon fascicles. hASCs showed high elongation and cytoskeleton anisotropic organization, typical of tenocytes. Moreover, the bioengineered living fibers supported the tenogenic differentiation of stem cells over time, as indicated by the sustained expression of tenogenic and extracellular matrix markers. Finally, the hydrogel layer acted not only as a hydrated biomimetic environment adequate for cell encapsulation but also as a carrier and delivery system of EVs to cells, which improved their tenogenic commitment. Conclusion. We bioengineered composite living fibers made of hierarchically organized electrospun fibers, coated with hydrogel encapsulating hASCs and biofunctional EVs. These provide an in vitro system to recreate tendon, allowing for the study of the effects of biophysical cues in tendon microenvironments and the influence of biologics on cells behavior. Acknowledgments. CP21/00136, PI22/01686, CA22170, 10.54499/2020.03410.CEECIND/CP1600/CT0013, 10.54499/2022.05526.PTDC


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 107 - 107
14 Nov 2024
Thakur A Harris S Brkljač M Cobb J Logishetty K
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Introduction. Bernese periacetabular osteotomy (PAO) repositions the acetabulum to increase femoral head coverage (FHC) in hip dysplasia. Currently, there is a paucity of objective peri-operative metrics to plan for optimal acetabular fragment repositioning. The MSk Lab Hip 3D Planner (MSkL-HP) measures acetabular morphology and simulates PAO cuts to achieve optimal FHC. We evaluated how adjusting location and orientation of cutting planes can alter FHC. Method. MSkL-HP simulated 274 feasible PAOs on four dysplastic hips. Femoroacetabular anatomy was landmarked to simulate cutting planes. Posterior column and ischial cuts were standardised, whilst iliac and pubic cut combinations varied. The slope of the iliac cut was either neutral (aligned to pelvis), exit point 5mm above the entry point (+5), or 5mm below (-5). The slope of the pubic cut was either 90°, 50°, or 70° (medial-to-lateral). Iliac and pubic cuts were simulated 0, 5 and 15mm - distal and medial – to a classic cut. Outcome measures were achieved LCEA, Tönnis, FHC and % bone overlap at the pubic cut. Targets were LCEA >30°, Tönnis angle <10°, and FHC >70% and minimum bone overlap ≥10%. Results. All feasible PAOs resulted in improvement from pre-operative metrics. Personalised cutting planes provided greater benefit than standard planes. Kruskal Wallis tests showed that the iliac cut at 5mm or 15mm resulted in a greater LCEA and lower Tönnis compared to the classic cut (p<0.05). Changing location of the pubic cut, and slope of the iliac and pubic cuts did not significantly affect LCEA and Tönnis in all hips (p<0.05). Cut combinations optimising metrics were associated with a lower % pubic cut overlap. Conclusion. MSkL-HP feasibly and reliably planned personalised PAO, measuring pre-operative and simulated post-operative objective metrics. Patient-specific pubic and iliac cuts enable greater correction whilst maintaining bone overlap. Further simulations on patients with varying morphology may improve standard techniques


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 122 - 122
14 Nov 2024
Tilotta V Vadalà G Giacomo GD Colaiacomo C Cicione C Ambrosio L Russo F Denaro V Papalia R
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Introduction. Osteoarthritis (OA) is a predominant chronic degenerative disease exerting a deep impact on quality of life and healthcare systems. Recent evidences suggest that pyroptosis, a programmed cell death characterized by inflammatory cytokine release, may play a significant role in modulating OA pain. The aim of the study is to investigate the potential role of extracellular vesicles derived from umbilical cord Wharton's jelly (WJ-MSC EVs) in the attenuation of the pyroptotic process on human chondrocytes (hOAC) pre-treated with synovial fluid in a 3D in vitro model. Method. EVs isolated by tangential filtration of the conditioned medium of WJ-MSCs were characterized for: morphology by TEM, surface markers by WB and size by NTA. Confocal microscopy was used to identify PKH26-labelled EVs and monitor their incorporation into hOACs. The hOACs from surgical waste material of patients undergoing knee replacement, expanded, encapsulated in alginate beads were pre-treated with synovial fluid for 24 h (SF) and subsequently co-incubated with WJ-MSC EVs. We examined viability (CCK-8), metabolic activity (MTT), nitrite production (Griess) activation of the pyroptotis (IF), DNA quantification (PicoGreen) and gene expression levels of extracellular matrix (ECM) components (qPCR). One-way ANOVA analysis was used to compare the groups under exam and data were expressed as mean ± S.D. Result. WJ-MSC EVs increased hOACs viability and metabolic activity. The production of nitrites is significantly decreased compared sample group treated with SF. WJ-MSC EVs inhibited inflammasomes NLRP3 (nucleotide-binding domain, leucine-rich repeat pyrin domain containing 3) activation. The ECM catabolic genes decreased compared to the inflamed SF group for ADAMTS-5 and MMP-1. Conclusion. Our results supported the potential use of WJ-MSC EVs as a cell-free strategy for OA, overcoming the side effects of cell-therapy. Moreover, WJ-MSC EVs are able to mitigate SF-treated hOACs pyroptotic death, attenuate ECM degradation and oxidative stress counteracting the inflamed status in OA development and progression


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 106-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1197 - 1198
1 Nov 2024
Haddad FS


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 106-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1333 - 1341
1 Nov 2024
Cheung PWH Leung JHM Lee VWY Cheung JPY

Aims. Developmental cervical spinal stenosis (DcSS) is a well-known predisposing factor for degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM) but there is a lack of consensus on its definition. This study aims to define DcSS based on MRI, and its multilevel characteristics, to assess the prevalence of DcSS in the general population, and to evaluate the presence of DcSS in the prediction of developing DCM. Methods. This cross-sectional study analyzed MRI spine morphological parameters at C3 to C7 (including anteroposterior (AP) diameter of spinal canal, spinal cord, and vertebral body) from DCM patients (n = 95) and individuals recruited from the general population (n = 2,019). Level-specific median AP spinal canal diameter from DCM patients was used to screen for stenotic levels in the population-based cohort. An individual with multilevel (≥ 3 vertebral levels) AP canal diameter smaller than the DCM median values was considered as having DcSS. The most optimal cut-off canal diameter per level for DcSS was determined by receiver operating characteristic analyses, and multivariable logistic regression was performed for the prediction of developing DCM that required surgery. Results. A total of 2,114 individuals aged 64.6 years (SD 11.9) who underwent surgery from March 2009 to December 2016 were studied. The most optimal cut-off canal diameters for DcSS are: C3 < 12.9 mm, C4 < 11.8 mm, C5 < 11.9 mm, C6 < 12.3 mm, and C7 < 13.3 mm. Overall, 13.0% (262 of 2,019) of the population-based cohort had multilevel DcSS. Multilevel DcSS (odds ratio (OR) 6.12 (95% CI 3.97 to 9.42); p < 0.001) and male sex (OR 4.06 (95% CI 2.55 to 6.45); p < 0.001) were predictors of developing DCM. Conclusion. This is the first MRI-based study for defining DcSS with multilevel canal narrowing. Level-specific cut-off canal diameters for DcSS can be used for early identification of individuals at risk of developing DCM. Individuals with DcSS at ≥ three levels and male sex are recommended for close monitoring or early intervention to avoid traumatic spinal cord injuries from stenosis. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2024;106-B(11):1333–1341


Aims

The efficacy of saline irrigation for treatment of implant-associated infections is limited in the presence of porous metallic implants. This study evaluated the therapeutic efficacy of antibiotic doped bioceramic (vancomycin/tobramycin-doped polyvinyl alcohol composite (PVA-VAN/TOB-P)) after saline wash in a mouse infection model implanted with titanium cylinders.

Methods

Air pouches created in female BalBc mice by subcutaneous injection of air. In the first of two independent studies, pouches were implanted with titanium cylinders (400, 700, and 100 µm pore sizes) and inoculated with Staphylococcus aureus (1 × 103 or 1 × 106 colony-forming units (CFU)/pouch) to establish infection and biofilm formation. Mice were killed after one week for microbiological analysis. In the second study, pouches were implanted with 400 µm titanium cylinders and inoculated with S. aureus (1 × 103 or 1 × 106 CFU/pouch). Four groups were tested: 1) no bacteria; 2) bacteria without saline wash; 3) saline wash only; and 4) saline wash plus PVA-VAN/TOB-P. After seven days, the pouches were opened and washed with saline alone, or had an additional injection of PVA-VAN/TOB-P. Mice were killed 14 days after pouch wash.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 106-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1231 - 1239
1 Nov 2024
Tzanetis P Fluit R de Souza K Robertson S Koopman B Verdonschot N

Aims

The surgical target for optimal implant positioning in robotic-assisted total knee arthroplasty remains the subject of ongoing discussion. One of the proposed targets is to recreate the knee’s functional behaviour as per its pre-diseased state. The aim of this study was to optimize implant positioning, starting from mechanical alignment (MA), toward restoring the pre-diseased status, including ligament strain and kinematic patterns, in a patient population.

Methods

We used an active appearance model-based approach to segment the preoperative CT of 21 osteoarthritic patients, which identified the osteophyte-free surfaces and estimated cartilage from the segmented bones; these geometries were used to construct patient-specific musculoskeletal models of the pre-diseased knee. Subsequently, implantations were simulated using the MA method, and a previously developed optimization technique was employed to find the optimal implant position that minimized the root mean square deviation between pre-diseased and postoperative ligament strains and kinematics.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 13, Issue 10 | Pages 596 - 610
21 Oct 2024
Toegel S Martelanz L Alphonsus J Hirtler L Gruebl-Barabas R Cezanne M Rothbauer M Heuberer P Windhager R Pauzenberger L

Aims

This study aimed to define the histopathology of degenerated humeral head cartilage and synovial inflammation of the glenohumeral joint in patients with omarthrosis (OmA) and cuff tear arthropathy (CTA). Additionally, the potential of immunohistochemical tissue biomarkers in reflecting the degeneration status of humeral head cartilage was evaluated.

Methods

Specimens of the humeral head and synovial tissue from 12 patients with OmA, seven patients with CTA, and four body donors were processed histologically for examination using different histopathological scores. Osteochondral sections were immunohistochemically stained for collagen type I, collagen type II, collagen neoepitope C1,2C, collagen type X, and osteocalcin, prior to semiquantitative analysis. Matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-1, MMP-3, and MMP-13 levels were analyzed in synovial fluid using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).


Aims

This study examined the relationship between obesity (OB) and osteoporosis (OP), aiming to identify shared genetic markers and molecular mechanisms to facilitate the development of therapies that target both conditions simultaneously.

Methods

Using weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA), we analyzed datasets from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database to identify co-expressed gene modules in OB and OP. These modules underwent Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathway enrichment and protein-protein interaction analysis to discover Hub genes. Machine learning refined the gene selection, with further validation using additional datasets. Single-cell analysis emphasized specific cell subpopulations, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), protein blotting, and cellular staining were used to investigate key genes.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 5, Issue 10 | Pages 858 - 867
11 Oct 2024
Yamate S Hamai S Konishi T Nakao Y Kawahara S Hara D Motomura G Nakashima Y

Aims

The aim of this study was to evaluate the suitability of the tapered cone stem in total hip arthroplasty (THA) in patients with excessive femoral anteversion and after femoral osteotomy.

Methods

We included patients who underwent THA using Wagner Cone due to proximal femur anatomical abnormalities between August 2014 and January 2019 at a single institution. We investigated implant survival time using the endpoint of dislocation and revision, and compared the prevalence of prosthetic impingements between the Wagner Cone, a tapered cone stem, and the Taperloc, a tapered wedge stem, through simulation. We also collected Oxford Hip Score (OHS), visual analogue scale (VAS) satisfaction, and VAS pain by postal survey in August 2023 and explored variables associated with those scores.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 5, Issue 10 | Pages 851 - 857
10 Oct 2024
Mouchantaf M Parisi M Secci G Biegun M Chelli M Schippers P Boileau P

Aims

Optimal glenoid positioning in reverse shoulder arthroplasty (RSA) is crucial to provide impingement-free range of motion (ROM). Lateralization and inclination correction are not yet systematically used. Using planning software, we simulated the most used glenoid implant positions. The primary goal was to determine the configuration that delivers the best theoretical impingement-free ROM.

Methods

With the use of a 3D planning software (Blueprint) for RSA, 41 shoulders in 41 consecutive patients (17 males and 24 females; means age 73 years (SD 7)) undergoing RSA were planned. For the same anteroposterior positioning and retroversion of the glenoid implant, four different glenoid baseplate configurations were used on each shoulder to compare ROM: 1) no correction of the RSA angle and no lateralization (C-L-); 2) correction of the RSA angle with medialization by inferior reaming (C+M+); 3) correction of the RSA angle without lateralization by superior compensation (C+L-); and 4) correction of the RSA angle and additional lateralization (C+L+). The same humeral inlay implant and positioning were used on the humeral side for the four different glenoid configurations with a 3 mm symmetric 135° inclined polyethylene liner.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 13, Issue 10 | Pages 559 - 572
8 Oct 2024
Wu W Zhao Z Wang Y Liu M Zhu G Li L

Aims

This study aimed to demonstrate the promoting effect of elastic fixation on fracture, and further explore its mechanism at the gene and protein expression levels.

Methods

A closed tibial fracture model was established using 12 male Japanese white rabbits, and divided into elastic and stiff fixation groups based on different fixation methods. Two weeks after the operation, a radiograph and pathological examination of callus tissue were used to evaluate fracture healing. Then, the differentially expressed proteins (DEPs) were examined in the callus using proteomics. Finally, in vitro cell experiments were conducted to investigate hub proteins involved in this process.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 13, Issue 5 | Pages 34 - 37
1 Oct 2024

The October 2024 Shoulder & Elbow Roundup360 looks at: Proximal humeral fractures with vascular compromise; Outcomes and challenges of revision arthroscopic rotator cuff repair: a systematic review; Evaluating treatment effectiveness for lateral elbow tendinopathy: a systematic review and network meta-analysis; Tendon transfer techniques for irreparable subscapularis tears: a comparative review; Impact of subscapularis repair in reverse shoulder arthroplasty; Isolated subscapularis tears strongly linked to shoulder pseudoparesis; Nexel and Coonrad-Morrey total elbow arthroplasties show comparable revision rates in New Zealand study; 3D MRI matches 3D CT in assessing bone loss and shoulder morphology in dislocation cases