Osteoporosis accounts for a leading cause of degenerative skeletal disease in the elderly. Osteoblast dysfunction is a prominent feature of age-induced bone loss. While microRNAs regulate osteogenic cell behavior and bone mineral acquisition, however, their function to osteoblast senescence during age-mediated osteoporosis remains elusive. This study aims to utilize osteoblast-specific microRNA-29a (miR-29a) transgenic mice to characterize its role in bone cell aging and
In osteoporosis treatment, current interventions, including pharmaceutical treatments and exercise protocols, suffer from challenges of guaranteed efficacy for patients and poor patient compliance. Moreover, bone loss continues to be a complicating factor for conditions such as spinal cord injury, prescribed bed-rest, and space flight. A low-cost treatment modality could improve patient compliance. Electrical stimulation has been shown to improve
Introduction. Stress shielding is one of the major concerns of load bearing implants (e.g. hip prostheses). Stiff implants cause stress shielding, which is thought to contribute to bone resorption1. On the contrary, low-stiffness implants generate high interfacial stresses that have been related to pain and interfacial micro-movements². Different attempts have been made to reduce these problems by optimizing either the stem design3 or using functionally graded implants (FGI) where the stem's mechanical properties are optimized4. In this way, new additive manufacturing technologies allow fabricating porous materials with well-controlled mesostructure, which allows tailoring their mechanical properties. In this work, Finite Element (FE) simulations are used to develop an optimization methodology for the shape and material properties of a FGI hip stem. The resorbed
Rapidly progressive osteoarthritis of the hip (RPOH) is an unusual subset of osteoarthritis. It is characterized by rapid joint space loss, chondrolysis, and sometimes marked femoral head and acetabular destruction as a late finding. The exact pathogenetic mechanism is unknown. Potential causes of RPOH include subchondral insufficiency fracture resulting from osteoporosis, increasing posterior pelvic tilt as a mechanical factor, and high serum levels of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-3 as biological factors. This study was aimed to identify some markers that associate with the destructive process of RPOH by analyzing the proposed pathological factors of the disease, MMP-3, pelvic tilt, and osteoporosis. Of female patients who visited our hospital with hip pain from 2012 through 2018, this study enrolled female patients with sufficient clinical records including the onset of hip pain, age and body mass index (BMI) at the onset, a series of radiographs during the period of >12 months from the onset of hip pain, and hematological data of MMP-3 and C-reactive protein (CRP). We found the hip joints of 31 patients meet the diagnostic criteria of RPOH, chondrolysis >two mm in one year, or 50% joint space narrowing in one year. Those patients were classified into two groups, 17 and 14 patients with and without subsequent femoral head destruction in one year shown by computed tomography, respectively. Serum MMP-3 and CRP were measured with blood samples within one year after the hip pain onset. The cortical thickness index (CTI) as an indicator of osteoporosis and pelvic tilt parameters were evaluated on the initial anteroposterior radiograph of the hip. These factors were statistically compared between the two groups. This study excluded male patients because RPOH occurs mainly in elderly females and the reference intervals of MMP-3 are different between males and females. There was no difference in age at onset or
Introduction. Osteoporosis is a common skeletal disorder characterised by a reduced
This study explored the shared genetic traits and molecular interactions between postmenopausal osteoporosis (POMP) and sarcopenia, both of which substantially degrade elderly health and quality of life. We hypothesized that these motor system diseases overlap in pathophysiology and regulatory mechanisms. We analyzed microarray data from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database using weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA), machine learning, and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) enrichment analysis to identify common genetic factors between POMP and sarcopenia. Further validation was done via differential gene expression in a new cohort. Single-cell analysis identified high expression cell subsets, with mononuclear macrophages in osteoporosis and muscle stem cells in sarcopenia, among others. A competitive endogenous RNA network suggested regulatory elements for these genes.Aims
Methods
Purpose. Medial tibial condylar fractures (MTCFs) are rare but a serious complication after unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA). The reasons for MTCFs was thought to be associated with the surgical procedures that are the halls for the guide pins, extended cut of the posterior tibial cortex, an incorrect positioning of the tibial keel groove, and an excessive force application when placing the tibial component. However, the relationship between MTCFs and the alignment of the tibial component has not been proven. The purpose of the study was to investigate the effect of the tibial component alignment to the MTCFs using the finite element method (FEM). Materials and Methods. We used three-dimensional (3D) image model of the tibia (Sawbones: Washington, US) on the FEM analysis software (ANSYS Design Space ver. 12, Tokyo, Japan). We measured the bone stresses in the 3D image model of the tibia at the site of the medial metaphyseal cortex and the anterior/posterior cortex. The tibial component was placed 0°, 3°varus, 3°valgus, 6°varus, and 6° valgus relative to the tibial anatomical axis in the coronal plane (Figure 1). In sagittal plane, tibial component was positioned 7° posterior inclination relative to the tibial anatomical axis. And, making an additional vertical groove at the posterior cortex by the extended sagittal saw cut of 2° and 10° posterior inclination, the impact of posterior cortical bone stress was evaluated (Figure 2). A load of 900 N was applied to the center of the tibial component parallel to the tibial axis, the maximum bone stress was subsequently calculated. Furthermore, to evaluate the stress distribution, we calculated the
To test the hypothesis that: CERAMENT[™]|G (C-G) would improve new bone growth and decrease infection rate after debridement as compared with 1) CERAMENT|BONE VOID FILLER (CBVF) and 2) no void filler in a rat osteomyelitis model. 72 Sprague Dawley rats were injected with 1.5 × 10∧6 CFU of S. aureus into a drill hole in the right tibia. After 3 weeks, the osteomyelitic defect was debrided, and filled with either: 1) C-G (n=32), 2) CBVF (n=20), or 3) nothing (n=20). 6 weeks after the second surgery, 20 rats from each group were sacrificed and the right tibias were harvested. A long-term group (n=12) of C-G treated rats were also sacrificed at 6 months after the second surgery. The tissues were sonicated and the colony forming units in the sonicate were quantified by serial dilutions and culture. MicroCT was used to quantify the new bone growth (BV/TV) in the debrided osteomyelitic void. Histological samples were analyzed for the presence of a neutrophil response by a blinded pathologist. (*: p<0.05). Positive cultures in:. ○ 30% of animals treated with CBVF. ○ 25% of animals treated with no void filler. ○ 0% of animals treated with C-G (*). Neutrophil reaction in:. ○ 35% of animals treated with CBVF. ○ 50% of animals treated with no void filler. ○ 0% of animals treated with C-G (*). The BV/TV in:. ○ C-G treated rats was 24% greater than CBVF treated rats (*). ○ C-G treated rats was 94% greater than rats treated with no void filler (*). ○ CBVF treated rats was 56% greater than rats treated with no void filler (*). Animals sacrificed at 6 months which were treated with C-G did not have any evidence of infection by culture or histology. The
Aims. Spontaneous osteonecrosis of the knee (SONK) mainly affects the medial femoral condyle, would be a good indication for UKA. The primary aim of this study was to assess the clinical, functional and radiographic outcomes at middle to long-term follow-up, of a consecutive series of fifty UKA used for the treatment of SONK. The secondary aim was to assess the volume of necrotic bone and determine if this influenced the outcome. Patients and Methods. We reviewed 50 knees who were treated for SONK. Patients included ten males and 38 females. The mean age was 73 years (range, 57 to 83 years). The mean height and body weight were, respectively 153 cm (141 ∼171 cm) and 57 kg (35 ∼75kg). All had been operated on using the Oxford mobile-bearing UKA (Zimmer-Biomet, Swindon, United Kingdom) with cement fixation. The mean follow-up period was 8.4 years (range, 4 to 15years). We measured the size (width, length and depth) and the volume to be estimated (width x length x depth) of the necrotic
Advances in the performance and longevity of total joint arthroplasty (TJA) have been enabled by related progress in implant materials, device designs, and surgical techniques. Successful TJA also depends upon adequate bone quality to provide an enduring mechanical foundation. Bone quality can be defined as the ability to repetitively withstand physiologically-relevant loads without excess deformation or fracture. It is now recognized that bone quality encompasses more than just material quantity, i.e. densitometrically-measured
Bone fracture healing is regulated by a series of complex physicochemical and biochemical processes. One of these processes is bone mineralisation, which is vital for normal bone development, its biomechanical competence and fracture healing. Phosphatase, orphan 1 (PHOSPHO1), a bone-specific phosphatase, has been shown to be involved in the mineralisation of the extracellular matrix in bone. It can hydrolyse phosphoethanolamine and phosphocholine to generate inorganic phosphate, which is crucial for bone mineralisation. Phospho1−/− mice show hypomineralised bone and spontaneous fractures. All these data led to the hypothesis that PHOSPHO1 is essential for bone mineralisation and its structural integrity. However, no study to our knowledge has shown the effects of PHOSPHO1 on bone fracture healing. In this study, we examined how PHOSPHO1-deficiency might affect the healing and quality of the fractured bones in Phospho1−/− mice. We performed rodded immobilised fracture surgery on the right tibia of control wild type (WT) and Phospho1−/− mice (n=16 for each group) at eight weeks of age. Bone was left to heal for four weeks and then the mice were euthanised and their tibias were analysed using Faxitron X-ray analyses, microCT, histology and histomorphometry and three-point bending test. Our microCT and X-ray analyses revealed that the appearance of the callus and several static parameters of bone remodeling at the fracture sites were markedly different in WT and Phospho1−/− mice. We observed a significant increase of BS/BV, BS/TV and trabecular number and decrease in trabecular thickness and separation in Phospho1−/− callus in comparison to the WT callus. These observations were further confirmed by histomorphometry. The increased
An understanding of forces that act on the shoulder joint is important for designing, testing, and evaluating shoulder arthroplasty products. Last year, we presented data describing upper arm motion during eight in-situ hours of occupational and recreational tasks. Using that data the associated humeral head joint forces were calculated with an upper extremity model in OpenSim. Five subjects from a nonrandom sampling of occupations wore the Inertial Measurment Units during a four hour period while at their work place performing their normal work duties and then during the four hour period of non-work activities immediately following. An unscented Kalman filter (UKF) was used to produce the 3D humeral – thoracic angles at 128 Hz from the IMU data. Because of the very large number of data points collected with the IMUs, ninety samples of twenty second duration were randomly selected from each four hour collection period. Using the sampled files, the time scales of the sampled files were scaled by a factor of five and then analyzed with the SUEM static optimization and joint reaction features. Not every sample file could be modeled resulting in an average number of sampled files of 66.7 per subject and condition (work/recreation). The humeral – thoracic angles were then used as input to the Stanford Upper Extremity Model (SUEM) in the OpenSim environment. The SUEM model allowed 2 rotation degree of freedom (rdof) for the forearm (flexion twist), 3 rdof at the humeral – scapular joint, and predicted scapular motion based on the humeral – thoracic elevation angle. All models were run for an assumed 80 kg body weight and included the
Introduction. The decreased
The success of a cementless Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA) depends not only on initial micromotion, but also on long-term failure mechanisms, e.g., implant-bone interface stresses and stress shielding. Any preclinical investigation aimed at designing femoral implant needs to account for temporal evolution of interfacial condition, while dealing with these failure mechanisms. The goal of the present multi-criteria optimization study was to search for optimum implant geometry by implementing a novel machine learning framework comprised of a neural network (NN), genetic algorithm (GA) and finite element (FE) analysis. The optimum implant model was subsequently evaluated based on evolutionary interface conditions. The optimization scheme of our earlier study [1] has been used here with an additional inclusion of an NN to predict the initial fixation of an implant model. The entire CAD based parameterization technique for the implant was described previously [1]. Three objective functions, the first two based on proximal resorbed
Published investigations with custom short stems have reported very encouraging results (Walker, et al, 1). However, off-the-shelf (OTS) versions of shorter length prostheses has not met with the same success. Several basic questions must be addressed. First, what is the purpose of a stem? Second, can stem length be reduced and if so by how much can this be safely done. Third, what are the effects of stem shortening and are there other design criteria which must take on greater importance in the absence of a stem to protect against implant aseptic failure. To examine these issues a testing rig was constructed which attempts to simulate the in vivo loading situation of a hip, Fig. 1 (Walker, et, al.). Fresh cadaveric femora were tested with the femora intact and then with femoral components of varying stem length implanted to examine the distribution of stresses within the femur under increasing loads as a function of stem length. This was correlated with observations of prospective DEXA measurement of proximal femoral
Sclerostin is a negative regulator of osteoblast differentiation and bone formation, probably through inhibition of the Wnt pathway. Distraction osteogenesis (DO) can be complicated by osteopenia and poor anabolic response, which may benefit from anabolic therapy. Sclerostin antibody (Scl-Ab) has been reported to stimulate bone formation and restore
Purpose. Up to 70% of the differences in human
Background. Distraction Osteogenesis can be complicated by regenerate insufficiency resulting in prolonged implant usage or regenerate failure with malalignment or fracture. Experimental evidence has demonstrated that bisphosphonates may mediate improved local limb BMD and regenerate strength. Methods. A prospective series of 14 patients over 5 years. One cohort (Group A) of these cases presented with established regenerate insufficiency leading to consideration for surgical intervention. Patients received a therapeutic regime of intravenous bisphosphonate A further cohort (Group B) of 7 patients was commenced on bisphosphonate therapy at an earlier stage, prior to the regenerate maturation phase. Results. Mean age at primary surgery was 11.6 years (3-17 yrs) with a minimum follow-up of 12 months after fixator removal. The sites of regenerate insufficiency were tibia (12) and distal femur (3), with 1 patient undergoing both femoral and tibial lengthening. Mean fixator time was 108 days prior to treatment for a mean lengthening of 5.3 cm. At time of treatment measurements demonstrated a reduced BMD in the bone, mean 44% (39-58%) of the normal limb, the primary consolidation index was high at 40.5 (46-68) days/cm, reflecting observed regenerate insufficiency. Significant increase in regenerate
Introduction. Anterior reconstruction has the advantage of conferring immediate stability to the cervico-thoracic junction. Aims and objectives. Assess clinical and radiological outcome in cervico-thoracic kyphosis treated with anterior reconstruction. Material and methods. 62 cases were treated with anterior reconstruction from 1996-2007. Minimum follow-up was 2years (2-6). Indications included tuberculosis (45), dysplastic(10), neoplastic (3) and traumatic (4). Average age was 28.6 years (13-72 years). Average pre-operative kyphosis was 26.4 degrees (5-84). Patients were grouped as long-neck (35) and short-neck (27) according to classification proposed by Bapat and Laheri. The caudal normal vertebra (CNV) matched on plain radiology and MRI in 40 (64.51%). In 22 level of fixation was extended due to poor
INTRODUCTION. Trabecular Titanium™ is an innovative material characterised by an high open porosity and composed by multi-planar regular hexagonal cells. It is not a traditional coating and its tri-dimensional structure has been studied to optimise osteointegration. Furthermore, it has excellent mechanical properties, as a very high tensile and fatigue resistance and an elastic module very similar to the that of the trabecular bone. The aim of this study is to evaluate the osteointegration and bone remodelling measuring the longitudinal pattern of change in BMD around a cementless acetabular cup made from Trabecular Titanium™ (Delta TT cup, Lima Corporate, Italy) in primary total hip arthroplasty (THA). METHODS. Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) analysis, radiographic evaluation on standard AP and lateral views and clinical evaluation with Harris Hip Score (HHS) and SF-36 were performed at 1 week, 3, 6, 12 months after surgery. RESULTS. Between February 2009 and June 2010, 72 patients underwent primary THA with Delta TT cup at 4 centres. There were 36 (50%) female and 36 (50%) male with an average age of 63 (range 39-75). Preliminary results include 72 patients with 56 at 3 months, 42 at 6 months and 28 at 12 months. The mean HHS improved from 48 points (range 14-79) preoperatively to 88 (range 74-100) at 3 months, to 94 (range 71-100) at 6 months and to 97 (range 94-100) at 12 months. SF-36 reported a progressive improvement of all domains. An initial transient decrease of the bone mineral density (BMD) occurred between 1 week and 3 months after surgery, then