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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 471 - 471
1 Nov 2011
Kitamura N Arakaki K Fujiki H Kurokawa T Iwamoto M Ueno M Kanaya F Osada Y Gong JP Yasuda K
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Development of artificial cartilage has been one of the future goals in the field of orthopaedic surgery. A few investigators have applied polyvinyl-alcohol hydrogel (single-network) to develop the artificial cartilage. However, it could not be applicable for clinical use due to insufficiency of the strength, the toughness, and the friction properties. The authors have conducted a fundamental study to apply a novel double-network (DN) hydrogel to develop the artificial cartilage. This hydrogel is composed of two independently crosslinked hydrophilic networks of poly-2-acrylamido-2-methyl-propanesulfonic acid (PAMPS) and poly-N,N′-Dimetyl acrylamide (PDMAAm) that are physically entangled with each other. This study evaluated the in vivo influence of a PAMPS/PDMAAm DN hydrogel on counterface cartilage in rabbit knee joints and its ex-vivo frictional properties on normal cartilage.

In the first experiment, the DN gel was implanted in a surgically created defect in the femoral trochlea of rabbit knee joints and the left knee was used as the control.

Evaluations using a confocal laser scanning microscopy demonstrated that the DN gel did not affect the surface microstructure (surface roughness, the number of small pits) of the counterface cartilage in vivo at 4 and 12 weeks. The histology also showed the DN gel had no pathological damage on the cartilage matrices and cells at 4 weeks.

However, 2 of the 5 DN gel-implanted knees showed mild irregularity on the counterface cartilage surface at 12 weeks. In the second experiment, the friction property between the normal and artificial cartilage was determined using a joint simulator apparatus. The ex-vivo mean friction coefficient of the DN gel to normal cartilage was 0.029, while that of the normal-to-normal cartilage articulation was 0.188. The coefficient of the DN gel-to-normal cartilage articulation was significantly lower that of the normal-to-normal cartilage articulation (p< 0.0001). This study suggested that the PAMPS/PDMAAm DN gel has very low friction coefficient on normal cartilage and has no significant detrimental effects on counterface cartilage in vivo, and can be a promising material to develop the artificial cartilage.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1689 - 1693
1 Dec 2005
Ikema Y Tohyama H Nakamura H Kanaya F Yasuda K

We compared the biological characteristics of extrinsic fibroblasts infiltrating the patellar tendon with those of normal, intrinsic fibroblasts in the normal tendon in vitro. Infiltrative fibroblasts were isolated from the patellar tendons of rabbits six weeks after an in situ freeze-thaw treatment which killed the intrinsic fibroblasts. These intrinsic cells were also isolated from the patellar tendons of rabbits which had not been so treated.

Proliferation and invasive migration into the patellar tendon was significantly slower for infiltrative fibroblasts than for normal tendon fibroblasts. Flow-cytometric analysis indicated that expression of α5β1 integrin at the cell surface was significantly lower in infiltrative fibroblasts than in normal tendon fibroblasts. The findings suggest that cellular proliferation and invasive migration of fibroblasts into the patellar tendon after necrosis are inferior to those of the normal fibroblasts. The inferior intrinsic properties of infiltrative fibroblasts may contribute to a slow remodelling process in the grafted tendon after ligament reconstruction.