header advert
Results 1 - 20 of 107
Results per page:
The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 1 | Pages 120 - 125
1 Jan 2000
Lan F Wunder JS Griffin AM Davis AM Bell RS White LM Ichise M Cole W

We used dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) to evaluate the extent of periprosthetic bone remodelling around a prosthesis for distal femoral reconstruction, the Kotz modular femoral tibial replacement (KMFTR; Howmedica, Rutherford, New Jersey). A total of 23 patients was entered into the study which had four parts: 1) 17 patients were scanned three times on both the implant and contralateral legs to determine whether the precision of DEXA measurements was adequate to estimate bone loss surrounding the anchorage piece of the KMFTR; 2) in 23 patients the bone mineral density (BMD) in different regions of interest surrounding the diaphyseal anchorage was compared with that of the contralateral femur at the same location to test whether there was consistent evidence of loss of BMD adjacent to the prosthetic stem; 3) in 12 patients sequential studies were performed about one year apart to compare bone loss; and 4) bone loss was compared in ten patients with implants fixed by three screws and in 13 without screws. The mean coefficients of variation (SD/mean) for the 17 sets of repeated scans ranged from 2.9% to 7.8% at different regions of interest in the KMFTR leg and from 1.4% to 2.5% in the contralateral leg. BMD was decreased in the KMFTR leg relative to the contralateral limb and the percentage of BMD loss in general increased as the region of interest moved distally in the femur. Studies done after one year showed no consistent pattern of progressive bone loss between the two measurements. The ten patients with implants fixed by screws were found to have a mean loss of BMD of 42% in the most distal part of the femur, while the 13 without screw fixation had a mean loss of 11%. DEXA was shown to have adequate precision to evaluate loss of BMD around the KMFTR. This was evident relative to the contralateral leg in all patients and generally increased in the most distal part of the femur. In general, it stabilised between two measurements taken one year apart and was greater surrounding implants fixed by cross-locking screws


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 1 | Pages 118 - 123
1 Jan 2001
Coathup MJ Blunn GW Flynn N Williams C Thomas NP

We investigated the implant-bone interface around one design of femoral stem, proximally coated with either a plasma-sprayed porous coating (plain porous) or a hydroxyapatite porous coating (porous HA), or which had been grit-blasted (Interlok). Of 165 patients implanted with a Bimetric hip hemiarthroplasty (Biomet, Bridgend, UK) specimens were retrieved from 58 at post-mortem.

We estimated ingrowth and attachment of bone to the surface of the implant in 21 of these, eight plain porous, seven porous HA and six Interlok, using image analysis and light morphometric techniques. The amount of HA coating was also quantified.

There was significantly more ingrowth (p = 0.012) and attachment of bone (p > 0.05) to the porous HA surface (mean bone ingrowth 29.093 ± 2.019%; mean bone attachment 37.287 ± 2.489%) than to the plain porous surface (mean bone ingrowth 21.762 ± 2.068%; mean bone attachment 18.9411 ± 1.971%). There was no significant difference in attachment between the plain porous and Interlok surfaces. Bone grew more evenly over the surface of the HA coating whereas on the porous surface, bone ingrowth and attachment occurred more on the distal and medial parts of the coated surface. No significant differences in the volume of HA were found with the passage of time.

This study shows that HA coating increases the amount of ingrowth and attachment of bone and leads to a more even distribution of bone over the surface of the implant. This may have implications in reducing stress shielding and limiting osteolysis induced by wear particles.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 123 - 123
2 Jan 2024
Hofmann S
Full Access

Metabolic bone diseases, such as osteoporosis and osteopetrosis, result from an imbalanced bone remodeling process. In vitro bone models are often used to investigate either bone formation or resorption independently, while in vivo, these processes are coupled. Combining these processes in a co-culture is challenging as it requires finding the right medium components to stimulate each cell type involved without interfering with the other cell type's differentiation. Furthermore, differentiation stimulating factors often comprise growth factors in supraphysiological concentrations, which can overshadow the cell-mediated crosstalk and coupling. To address these challenges, we aimed to recreate the physiological bone remodeling process, which follows a specific sequence of events starting with cell activation and bone resorption by osteoclasts, reversal, followed by bone formation by osteoblasts. We used a mineralized silk fibroin scaffold as a bone-mimetic template, inspired by bone's extracellular matrix composition and organization. Our model supported osteoclastic resorption and osteoblastic mineralization in the specific sequence that represents physiological bone remodeling. We also demonstrated how culture variables, such as different cell ratios, base media, and the use of osteogenic/osteoclast supplements, and the application of mechanical load, can be adjusted to represent either a high bone turnover system or a self-regulating system. The latter system did not require the addition of osteoclastic and osteogenic differentiation factors for remodeling, therefore avoiding growth factor use. Our in vitro model for bone remodeling has the potential to reduce animal experiments and advance in vitro drug development for bone remodeling pathologies like osteoporosis. By recreating the physiological bone remodeling cycle, we can investigate cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions, which are essential for understanding bone physiology and pathology. Furthermore, by tuning the culture variables, we can investigate bone remodeling under various conditions, potentially providing insights into the mechanisms underlying different bone disorders


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 26 - 26
17 Nov 2023
Zou Z Cheong VS Fromme P
Full Access

Abstract. Objectives. Young patients receiving metallic bone implants after surgical resection of bone cancer require implants that last into adulthood, and ideally life-long. Porous implants with similar stiffness to bone can promote bone ingrowth and thus beneficial clinical outcomes. A mechanical remodelling stimulus, strain energy density (SED), is thought to be the primary control variable of the process of bone growth into porous implants. The sequential process of bone growth needs to be taken into account to develop an accurate and validated bone remodelling algorithm, which can be employed to improve porous implant design and achieve better clinical outcomes. Methods. A bone remodelling algorithm was developed, incorporating the concept of bone connectivity (sequential growth of bone from existing bone) to make the algorithm more physiologically relevant. The algorithm includes adaptive elastic modulus based on apparent bone density, using a node-based model to simulate local remodelling variations while alleviating numerical checkerboard problems. Strain energy density (SED) incorporating stress and strain effects in all directions was used as the primary stimulus for bone remodelling. The simulations were developed to run in MATLAB interfacing with the commercial FEA software ABAQUS and Python. The algorithm was applied to predict bone ingrowth into a porous implant for comparison against data from a sheep model. Results. The accuracy of the predicted bone remodelling was verified for standard loading cases (bending, torsion) against analytical calculations. Good convergence was achieved. The algorithm predicted good bone remodelling and growth into the investigated porous implant. Using the standard algorithm without connectivity, bone started to remodel at locations unconnected to any bone, which is physiologically implausible. The implementation of bone connectivity ensures the gradual process of bone growth into the implant pores from the sides. The bone connectivity algorithm predicted that the full remodelling required more time (approximately 50% longer), which should be considered when developing post-surgical rehabilitation strategies for patients. Both algorithms with and without bone connectivity implementation converged to same final stiffness (less than 0.01% difference). Almost all nodes reached the same density value, with only a limited number of nodes (less than 1%) in transition areas with a strong density gradient having noticeable differences. Conclusions. An improved bone remodelling algorithm based on strain energy density that modelled the sequential process of bone growth has been developed and tested. For a porous metallic bone implant the same final bone density distribution as for the original adaptive elasticity theory was predicted, with a slower and more fidelic process of growth from existing surrounding bone into the porous implant. Declaration of Interest. (b) declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research reported:I declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research project


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 93 - 93
1 Nov 2021
Schiavi J Remo A McNamara L Vaughan T
Full Access

Introduction and Objective. Bone remodelling is a continuous process whereby osteocytes regulate the activity of osteoblasts and osteoclasts to repair loading-induced microdamage. While many in vitro studies have established the role of paracrine factors (e.g., RANKL/OPG) and cellular pathways involved in bone homeostasis, these techniques are generally limited to two-dimensional cell culture, which neglects the role of the native extracellular matrix in maintaining the phenotype of osteocyte. Recently, ex vivo models have been used to understand cell physiology and mechanobiology in the presence of the native matrix. Such approaches could be applicable to study the mechanisms of bone repair, whilst also enabling exploration of biomechanical cues. However, to date an ex vivo model of bone remodelling in cortical bone has not been developed. In this study, the objective was to develop an ex vivo model where cortical bone was subjected to cyclic strains to study the remodelling of bone. Materials and Methods. Ex vivo model of bone remodelling induced by cyclic loading: At the day of culling, beam-shape bovine bone samples were cut and preserved in PBS + 5% Pen/Strep + 2 mM L-Glut overnight at 37°C. Cyclic strains were applied with a three-point bend system to induce damage with a regime at 16.66 mm/min for 5,000 cycles in sterile PBS in Evolve® bags (maximum strain 6%). A control group was cultured under static conditions. Metabolic activity: Alamar Blue assays were performed after 1 and 7 days of ex vivo culture for each group (Static, Loaded) and normalized to weight. Bone remodelling: ALP activity was assessed in the media at day 1 and 7. After 24 hours cell culture conditioned media (CM) was collected from each group and stored at −80°C. RAW264.7 cells were cultured with CM for 6 days, after which the samples were stained for TRAP, to determine osteoclastogenesis, and imaged. Histomorphometry: Samples were cultured with calcein for 3 days to label bone formation between day 4 and 7. Fluorescent images were captured at day 7. μCT scanning was performed at 3 μm resolution after labelling samples with BaSO. 4. precipitate to quantify bone damage. Results. Bone was sectioned and cultured to maintain live osteoblasts and osteocytes. CM that was obtained 24 hours after cyclic loading and added to RAW264.7 cells cultures, resulted in significantly increased osteoclastogenic potential compared to that from static samples (4.245±1.65% vs 0.88±0.48%, p<0.001). Calcein and HE staining indicated the presence of structures similar to bone remodelling cones in both groups after 7 days of culture. Also, 7 days post-loading, matrix microdamage in the stimulated area, detected with the BaSO. 4. precipitate, were not significantly increased under the load point in loaded samples (0.11±0.05% of bone volume), while at the support areas it was significantly higher (0.2387±0.06%, p<0.001) compared to the static (0.062±0.02%). Conclusions. This study demonstrates that (1) cyclic strains applied on ex vivo bovine cortical bone successfully induced remodelling as characterized by the formation of bone resorption cones, along with an increase of osteoclast formation, and (2) there was an induction of microdamage post loading as shown by the significant increases in microdamage labelled. This supports previous in vivo studies with an increase in osteoclastogenesis up to 7 days post loading. This is the first evidence of the development of an ex vivo model to study osteon remodelling that could be applied to study bone physiology and repair


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 85 - 85
11 Apr 2023
Williamson A Bateman L Kelly D Le Maitre C Aberdein N
Full Access

The effect of high-fat diet and testosterone replacement therapy upon bone remodelling was investigated in orchiectomised male APOE-/- mice. Mice were split in to three groups: sham surgery + placebo treatment (control, n=9), orchiectomy plus placebo treatment (n=8) and orchiectomy plus testosterone treatment (n=10). Treatments were administered via intramuscular injection once a fortnight for 17 weeks before sacrifice at 25 weeks of age. Tibiae were scanned ex-vivo using µCT followed by post-analysis histology and immunohistochemistry. Previously presented µCT data demonstrated orchiectomised, placebo treated mice exhibited significantly reduced trabecular bone volume, number, thickness and BMD compared to control mice despite no significant differences in body weight. Trabecular parameters were rescued back to control levels in orchiectomised mice treated with testosterone. No significant differences were observed in the cortical bone. Assessment of TRAP stained FFPE sections revealed no significant differences in osteoclast or osteoblast number along the endocortical surface. IHC assessment of osteoprotegerin (OPG) expression in osteoblasts is to be quantified alongside markers of osteoclastogenesis including RANK and RANKL. Results support morphological analysis of cortical bone where no change in cortical bone volume or density between groups is in line with no significant change in osteoblast or osteoclast number and percentage across all three groups. Future work will include further IHC assessment of bone remodelling and adiposity, as well as utilisation of mechanical testing to establish the effects of observed morphological differences in bone upon mechanical properties. Additionally, the effects of hormone treatments upon murine-derived bone cells will be investigated to provide mechanistic insights


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 49 - 49
11 Apr 2023
Speirs A Melkus G Rakhra K Beaule P
Full Access

Femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) results from a morphological deformity of the hip and is associated with osteoarthritis (OA). Increased bone mineral density (BMD) is observed in the antero-superior acetabulum rim where impingement occurs. It is hypothesized that the repeated abnormal contact leads to damage of the cartilage layer, but could also cause a bone remodelling response according to Wolff's Law. Thus the goal of this study was to assess the relationship between bone metabolic activity measured by PET and BMD measured in CT scans. Five participants with asymptomatic cam deformity, three patients with uni-lateral symptomatic cam FAI and three healthy controls were scanned in a 3T PET-MRI scanner following injection with [18F]NaF. Bone remodelling activity was quantified with Standard Uptake Values (SUVs). SUVmax was analyzed in the antero-superior acetabular rim, femoral head and head-neck junction. In these same regions, BMD was calculated from CT scans using the calibration phantom included in the scan. The relationship between SUVmax and BMD from corresponding regions was assessed using the coefficient of determination (R. 2. ) from linear regression. High bone activity was seen in the cam deformity and acetabular rim. SUVmax was negatively correlated with BMD in the antero-superior region of the acetabulum (R. 2. =0.30, p=0.08). SUVmax was positively correlated with BMD in the antero-superior head-neck junction of the femur (R. 2. =0.359, p=0.067). Correlations were weak in other regions. Elevated bone turnover was seen in patients with a cam deformity but the relationship to BMD was moderate. This study demonstrates a pathomechanism of hip degeneration associated with FAI deformities, consistent with Wolff's law and the proposed mechanical cause of hip degeneration in FAI. [18F]-NaF PET SUV may be a biomarker of degeneration, especially in early stages of degeneration, when joint preservation surgery is likely to be the most successful


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 74 - 74
17 Apr 2023
Theodoridis K Hall T Munford M Van Arkel R
Full Access

The success of cementless orthopaedic implants relies on bony ingrowth and active bone remodelling. Much research effort is invested to develop implants with controllable surface roughness and internal porous architectures that encourage these biological processes. Evaluation of these implants requires long-term and costly animal studies, which do not always yield the desired outcome requiring iteration. The aim of our study is to develop a cost-effective method to prescreen design parameters prior to animal trials to streamline implant development and reduce live animal testing burden. Ex vivo porcine cancellous bone cylinders (n=6, Ø20×12mm) were extracted from porcine knee joints with a computer-numerically-controlled milling machine under sterile conditions within 4 hours of animal sacrifice. The bone discs were implanted with Ø6×12mm additive manufactured porous titanium implants and were then cultured for 21days. Half underwent static culture in medium (DMEM, 10% FBS, 1% antibiotics) at 37°C and 5% CO. 2. The rest were cultured in novel high-throughput stacked configuration in a bioreactor that simulated physiological conditions after surgery: the fluid flow and cyclic compression force were set at 10ml/min and 10–150 N (1Hz,5000 cycles/day) respectively. Stains were administered at days 7 and 14. Samples were evaluated with widefield microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and with histology. More bone remodelling was observed on the samples cultured within the bioreactor: widefield imaging showed more remodelling at the boundaries between the implant-bone interface, while SEM revealed immature bone tissue integration within the pores of the implant. Histological analysis confirmed these results, with many more trabecular struts with new osteoid formation on the samples cultured dynamically compared to static ones. Ex vivo bone can be used to analyse new implant technologies with lower cost and ethical impact than animal trial. Physiological conditions (load and fluid flow) promoted bone ingrowth and remodelling


Abstract. Cranial cruciate ligament (CrCL) disease/rupture is a highly prevalent orthopaedic disease in dogs and common cause of pain, lameness, and secondary joint osteoarthritis (OA). Previous experiments investigating the role of glutamate receptors (GluR) in arthritic degeneration and pain revealed that OA biomarkers assessing early bone turnover and inflammation, including osteoprotegerin (OPG) and the receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-B ligand (RANKL) are more likely to be influenced by glutamate signalling. Moreover, interleukin-6 (IL-6) has a complex and potentially bi directional (beneficial and detrimental) effect, and it is a critical mediator of arthritic pain, OA progression and joint destruction. Objectives. 1) to recruit dogs undergoing CrCL disease/rupture surgery and obtain discarded synovial fluid (SF) and serum/plasma (ethics approval, RCVS:2017/14/Alves); 2) to quantify the biomarkers listed above in the SF and serum/plasma by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA); 3) to assess radiographic OA at the time of surgery and correlate it with the biomarkers and clinical findings. Methods. Abnova, Abcam and AMSBIO ELISA kits were tested using a validation protocol relating the standard curve to a dilution series of SF and serum/plasma (1× to 1/50×), with and without SF hyaluronidase treatment to evaluate linearity, specificity and optimal dilutions. Validated ELISA kits were used to measure [IL-6], glutamate [glu], [RANKL] and [OPG] in SF and serum/plasma. For each dog, CrCL disease pre-operative lameness scores were graded as: (1) mild, (2) moderate (easily visible), (3) marked (encumbered), (4) non-weightbearing lameness. Blinded OA scoring was performed on radiographs [15–60, normal-severe OA]. Results. canine population (n=14) was of various breeds, aged between 2–10 years and weighing 17.1–45.5Kg; 42.86% male; 57.14% female; 83.33% males and 62.5% females were neutered. Lameness scores varied from 1 and 4 (average 2.07±1.12) and radiographic OA scores from 18 and 36 (average 27.86±5.11). Individual correlations in concentrations with respect to age, weight, lameness score (1–4) and OA scores (15–60) were tested. SF [glu] and lameness score were inversely correlated with higher levels of lameness corresponding to lower SF [glu] (P=0.0141). SF [RANKL] inversely correlated with weight (P=0.0045) and lameness score (P=0.0135), and serum [RANKL] inversely correlated with weight (P=0.0437). There was also a negative correlation between SF and serum [OPG] and weight (P=0.0165 and P=0.0208, respectively). No other significant correlations were detected. Overall, [glu] and [IL-6] are increased in SF compared to serum/plasma, by 12.84 and 1.28, respectively, whereas all the remaining biomarkers are higher (2–3 times) in the serum/plasma compared to SF. Principal component analysis (PCA) and Pearson correlation coefficient matrix [IL-6/glu/RANKL/OPG] (n=7) showed SF [IL-6] correlates with SF [glu] (rs=0.64) and strong positive correlations between SF/serum [RANKL] and SF/serum [OPG] (rs 0.68–0.96). Conclusions. Dogs with CrCL disease show an association between the bone remodelling markers RANKL and OPG, and the inflammatory cytokine IL-6, and to a lesser extent SF [glu]. Therapeutics targeting bone remodelling, IL-6 or GluR/[glu] may be of interest for the management of OA in dogs. Declaration of Interest. (b) declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research reported:I declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research project


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 28 - 28
1 Nov 2021
Avnet S Lipreri MV Pompo GD Graziani G Boanini E Baldini N
Full Access

Introduction and Objective. The osteocyte, recognized as a major orchestrator of osteoblast and osteoclast activity, is the most important key player during bone remodeling processes. Imbalances that occur during bone remodeling, caused by hormone perturbations or alterations in mechanical loading, can induce bone disease as osteoporosis. Due to limited understanding of the underlying mechanisms, current therapies for osteoporosis cannot adequately address this imbalance because current studies of osteocytes rely on conventional cell culture that cannot recapitulate local in vivo microenvironments for the lack of control of the spatial/temporal distribution of cells and biomolecules. Microfluidics is the science and technology of microscale fluid manipulating and sensing and can help fill this gap. Materials and Methods. We used a microfluidic device to enable the culture of osteocyte-like cells (MLO-Y4 and MLO-A5) in a 3D fashion. Osteocytes were cultured in a perfused and 160 μm high channel and embedded in a bone-like extracellular matrix: osteocytes were embedded in a matrigel- and collagen-based hydrogel enriched with nanostructured hydroxypatite crystals (HA-NP) to mimic bone. To set up the best combination of matrigel enriched with Type I collagen we used fluorescent microspheres and confocal analysis. To evaluate the viability and the expression of osteocytic markers, we used live-dead assay amd immunofluorescent staining and confocal analysis combined with automated quantification. For mineralization, we performed alizarin red staining. Results. Osteocytes in the organ-on-a-chip model showed high viability and, in respect to 2D conventional cell cultures an increased differentiation, as assessed by a live-dead assay and the staining of the osteocytic markers connexin-43 and alkaline phosphatase and the increased mineralization activity. Furthermore, the addition of HA-NP significantly increased the formation of dendrite-like structures spreading through the xyz-axes, as assessed after G-actin immunofluorescence. Conclusions. Using a microfluidic device for MLO-Y4 and MLO-A5 cell cultures, compared to the 2D surfaces, we demonstrated a significant difference in cell differentiation and morphology. In particular, 3D cultures allowed the formation of 3D cell networks and the osteogenic phenotype. As a platform technology, this microfluidic device can function as a novel cell culture model that enables further studies of osteocytes and 3D co-culturing with other bone cells for the screening of anti-osteoporotic drugs


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 23 - 23
1 Dec 2022
Borciani G Montalbano G Melo P Baldini N Ciapetti G Brovarone CV
Full Access

Osteoporosis is a worldwide disease resulting in the increase of bone fragility and enhanced fracture risk in adults. In the context of osteoporotic fractures, bone tissue engineering (BTE), i.e., the use of bone substitutes combining biomaterials, cells, and bone inducers, is a potential alternative to conventional treatments. Pre-clinical testing of innovative scaffolds relies on in vitro systems where the simultaneous presence of osteoblasts (OBs) and osteoclasts (OCs) is required to mimic their crosstalk and molecular cooperation for bone remodelling. To this aim, two composite materials based on type I collagen were developed, containing either strontium-enriched mesoporous bioactive glasses or rod-like hydroxyapatite nanoparticles. Following chemical crosslinking with genipin, the nanostructured materials were tested for 2–3 weeks with an indirect co-culture of human trabecular bone-derived OBs and buffy coat-derived OC precursors. The favourable structural and biological properties of the materials proved to successfully support the viability, adhesion, and differentiation of bone cells, encouraging a further investigation of the two bioactive systems as biomaterial inks for the 3D printing of more complex scaffolds for BTE


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 19 - 19
2 Jan 2024
Li R Zheng J Smith P Chen X
Full Access

Device-associated bacterial infections are a major and costly clinical challenge. This project aimed to develop a smart new biomaterial for implants that helps to protect against infection and inflammation, promote bone growth, and is biodegradable. Gallium (Ga) doped strontium-phosphate was coated on pure Magnesium (Mg) through a chemical conversion process. Mg was distributed in a graduated manner throughout the strontium-phosphate coating GaSrPO4, with a compact structure and a Ga-rich surface. We tested this sample for its biocompatibility, effects on bone remodeling and antibacterial activities including Staphylococcus aureus, S. epidermidis and E. coli - key strains causing infection and early failure of the surgical implantations in orthopaedics and trauma. Ga was distributed in a gradient way throughout the entire strontium-phosphate coating with a compact structure and a gallium-rich surface. The GaSrPO4 coating protected the underlying Mg from substantial degradation in minimal essential media at physiological conditions over 9 days. The liberated Ga ions from the coatings upon Mg specimens inhibited the growth of bacterial tested. The Ga dopants showed minimal interferences with the SrPO4 based coating, which boosted osteoblasts and undermined osteoclasts in in vitro co-cultures model. The results evidenced this new material may be further translated to preclinical trial in large animal model and towards clinical trial. Acknowledgements: Authors are grateful to the financial support from the Australian Research Council through the Linkage Scheme (ARC LP150100343). The authors acknowledge the facilities, and the scientific and technical assistance of the RMIT University and John Curtin School of Medical Research, Australian National University


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 106 - 106
2 Jan 2024
Sang-Soo L
Full Access

Wear debris from implant interfaces is the major factor leading to periprosthetic osteolysis. Fibroblast-like synoviocytes (FLSs) populate the intimal lining of the synovium and are in direct contact with wear debris. This study aimed to elucidate the effect of Ti particles as wear debris on human FLSs and the mechanism by which they might participate in the bone remodeling process during periprosthetic osteolysis. FLSs were isolated from synovial tissue from patients, and the condition medium (CM) was collected after treating FLSs with sterilized Ti particles. The effect of CM was analyzed for the induction of osteoclastogenesis or any effect on osteogenesis and signaling pathways. The results demonstrated that Ti particles could induce activation of the NFκB signaling pathway and induction of COX-2 and inflammatory cytokines in FLSs. The amount of RANL in the conditioned medium collected from Ti particle-stimulated FLSs (Ti CM) showed the ability to stimulate osteoclast formation. The Ti CM also suppressed the osteogenic initial and terminal differentiation markers for osteoprogenitors, such as alkaline phosphate activity, matrix mineralization, collagen synthesis, and expression levels of Osterix, Runx2, collagen 1α, and bone sialoprotein. Inhibition of the WNT and BMP signaling pathways was observed in osteoprogenitors after the treatment with the Ti CM. In the presence of the Ti CM, exogenous stimulation by WNT and BMP signaling pathways failed to stimulate osteogenic activity in osteoprogenitors. Induced expression of sclerostin (SOST: an antagonist of WNT and BMP signaling) in Ti particletreated FLSs and secretion of SOST in the Ti CM were detected. Neutralization of SOST in the Ti CM partially restored the suppressed WNT and BMP signaling activity as well as the osteogenic activity in osteoprogenitors. Our results reveal that wear debris-stimulated FLSs might affect bone loss by not only stimulating osteoclastogenesis but also suppressing the bone-forming ability of osteoprogenitors. In the clinical setting, targeting FLSs for the secretion of antagonists like SOST might be a novel therapeutic approach for preventing bone loss during inflammatory osteolysis


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 88 - 88
2 Jan 2024
Joris V Balmayor E van Griensven M
Full Access

Bone homeostasis is a highly regulated process involving pathways in bone as WNT, FGF or BMP, but also requiring support from surrounding tissues as vessels and nerves. In bone diseases, the bone-vessel-nerve triad is impacted. Recently, new players appeared as regulators of bone homeostasis: microRNAs (miRNA). Five miRNAs associated with osteoporotic fractures are already known, among which miR-125b is decreasing bone formation by downregulating human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) differentiation. Other miRNAs, as miR-214 (in cluster with miR-199a), are secreted by osteoclasts to regulate osteoblasts and inhibit bone formation. This forms a very complex regulatory network. hMSCs and osteoblasts (n=3) were transfected with mimic/antagomiR of miR-125b, miR-199a-5p or miR-214, or with a scrambled miRNA (negative control) in osteogenic differentiation calcium-enriched medium (Ca++). Mineralization was assessed by Alizarin Red/CPC staining, miRNA expression by qPCR and protein by western blotting. Exposure of hMSCs or osteoblasts to Ca++ increased mineralization compared to basal medium. hMSCs transfected with miR-125b mimic in Ca++ presented less mineralization compared to scramble. This correlated with decreased levels of BMPR2 and RUNX2. hMSCs transfected with miR-125b inhibitor presented higher mineralization. Interestingly, hMSCs transfected with miR-214 mimic in Ca++ presented no mineralization while miR-214 inhibitor increased mineralization. No differences were observed in hMSCs transfected with miR-199a-5p modulators. On the contrary, osteoblasts transfected with miR-199a-5p mimic present less mineralization than scrambled-transfected and same was observed for miR-214 and miR-125b mimics. We highlight that miR-125b and miR-214 decrease mineralization of hMSCs in calcium-enriched medium. We noticed that miR-199a-5p is able to regulate mineralization in osteoblasts but not in hMSCs suggesting that this effect is cell-specific. Interestingly, the cluster miR-199a/214 is known as modulator of vascular function and could thus contribute to bone remodeling via different ways. With this work we slightly open the door to possible therapeutic approaches for bone diseases


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 50 - 50
1 Mar 2021
Favier C McGregor A Phillips A
Full Access

Abstract. OBJECTIVES. Bone health deterioration is a major public health issue. General guidelines for the limitation of bone loss prescribe a healthy lifestyle and a minimum level of physical activity. However, there is no specific recommendation regarding targeted activities that can effectively maintain lumbar spine bone health. To provide a better understanding of such influencing activities, a new predictive modelling framework was developed to study bone remodelling under various loading conditions. METHODS. The approach is based on a full-body subject-specific musculoskeletal model [1] combined with structural finite element models of the lumbar vertebrae. Using activities recorded with the subject, musculoskeletal simulations provide physiological loading conditions to the finite element models which simulate bone remodelling using a strain-driven optimisation algorithm [2]. With a combination of daily living activities representative of a healthy lifestyle including locomotion activities (walking, stair ascent and descent, sitting down and standing up) and spine-focused activities involving twisting and reaching, this modelling framework generates a healthy bone architecture in the lumbar vertebrae. The influence of spine-focused tasks was studied by adapting healthy vertebrae to an altered loading scenario where only locomotion activities were performed. RESULTS. The spine-focused activities were responsible for 57% of the overall bone mechanical stimulus of the five lumbar vertebrae. Cortical bone maintenance was more influenced by these activities in the superior vertebrae than in the inferior ones, with a stimulus degradation of 74% in L1 against 24% in L5 when adapted to the altered loading scenario. Trabecular bone stimulus degradation varied between 53% and 68%. CONCLUSION. The study suggests that locomotion activities are insufficient to maintain lumbar spine bone health. When appropriate, larger spine movements should be recommended as part of the minimum daily physical activities. Declaration of Interest. (b) declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research reported:I declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research project


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 74 - 74
11 Apr 2023
Gilbert S Jones R White P Mason D
Full Access

Stimulation of the mechanosensitive ion channel, Piezo1 promotes bone anabolism and SNPs in the Piezo1 locus are associated with changes in fracture risk. Osteocytes function as critical regulators of bone homeostasis by sensing mechanical signals. The current study used a human, cell-based physiological, 3D in vitro model of bone to determine whether loading of osteocytes in vitro results in upregulation of the Piezo1 pathway. Human Y201 MSCs, embedded in type I collagen gels and differentiated to osteocytes for 7-days, were subjected to pathophysiological load (5000 µstrain, 10Hz, 5 mins; n=6) with unloaded cells as controls (n=4). RNA was extracted 1-hr post load and assessed by RNAseq analysis. To mimic mechanical load and activate Piezo1, cells were differentiated to osteocytes for 13 days and treated ± Yoda1 (5µM, 2- and 24-hs, n=4); vehicle treated cells served as controls (n=4). RNA was subjected to RT-qPCR and data normalised to the housekeeping gene, YWHAZ. Media was analysed for IL6 release by ELISA. Mechanical load upregulated Piezo1 gene expression (16.5-fold, p<0.001) and expression of the transcription factor NFATc1, and matricellular protein CYR61, known regulators of Piezo1 mechanotransduction (3-fold; p= 5.0E-5 and 6.8-fold; p= 6.0E-5, respectively). After 2-hrs, Yoda1 increased the expression of the early mechanical response gene, cFOS (11-fold; p=0.021), mean Piezo1 expression (2.3-fold) and IL-6 expression (103-fold, p<0.001). Yoda1 increased the release of IL6 protein after 24 hours (7.5-fold, p=0.001). This study confirms Piezo1 as an important mechanosensor in osteocytes. Piezo1 activation mediated an increase in IL6, a cytokine that drives inflammation and bone resorption providing a direct link between mechanical activation of Piezo1, bone remodeling and inflammation, which may contribute to mechanically induced joint degeneration in diseases such as osteoarthritis. Mechanistically, we hypothesize this may occur through promoting Ca2+ influx and activation of the NFATc1 signaling pathway


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 87 - 87
2 Jan 2024
Moura S Olesen J Barbosa M Soe K Almeida M
Full Access

Osteoclasts (OCs) are multinucleated cells that play a pivotal role in skeletal development and bone remodeling. Abnormal activation of OCs contributes to the development of bone-related diseases, such as osteoporosis, bone metastasis and osteoarthritis. Restoring the normal function of OCs is crucial for bone homeostasis. Recently, RNA therapeutics emerged as a new field of research for osteoarticular diseases. The aim of this study is to use non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) to molecularly engineer OCs and modulate their function. Specifically, we investigated the role of the microRNAs (namely miR-16) and long ncRNAs (namely DLEU1) in OCs differentiation and fusion. DLEU1/DLEU2 region, located at chromosome 13q14, also encodes miR-15 and miR-16. Our results show that levels of these ncRNA transcripts are differently expressed at distinct stages of the OCs differentiation. Specifically, silencing of DLEU1 by small interfering RNAs (siDLEU1) and overexpression of miR-16 by synthetic miRNA mimics (miR-16-mimics) led to a significant reduction in the number of OCs formed per field (OC/field), both at day 5 and 9 of the differentiation stage. Importantly, time-lapse analysis, used to track OCs behavior, revealed a significant decrease in fusion events after transfection with siDLEU1 or miR-16-mimics and an alteration in the fusion mode and partners. Next, we investigated the migration profile of these OCs, and the results show that only miR-16-mimics-OCs, but not siDLEU-OCs, have a lower percentage of immobile cells and an increase in cells with mobile regime, compared with controls. No differences in cell shape were found. Moreover, mass-spectrometry quantitative proteomic analysis revealed independent effects of siDLEU1 and miR-16-mimics at the protein levels. Importantly, DLEU1 and miR-16 act by distinct processes and pathways. Collectively, our findings support the ncRNAs DLEU1 and miR-16 as therapeutic targets to modulate early stages of OCs differentiation and, consequently, to impair OC fusion, advancing ncRNA-therapeutics for bone-related diseases. Acknowledgements: Authors would like to thank to AO CMF / AO Foundation (AOCMFS-21-23A). SRM and MIA are supported by FCT (SFRH/BD/147229/2019 and BiotechHealth Program; CEECINST/00091/2018/CP1500/CT0011, respectively)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 69 - 69
1 Mar 2021
Sahm F Grote VF Detsch R Kreller T Boccaccini A Bader R Jonitz-Heincke A
Full Access

Several electrical fields are known to be present in bone tissue as originally described by Fukada and Yasuda in the year 1957. Intrinsic voltages can derive from bone deformation and reversely lead to mechanical modifications, called the piezoelectric effect. This effect is used in the clinic for the treatment of bone defects by applying electric and magnetic stimulation directly to the bone supplied with an implant such as the electroinductive screw system. Through this system a sinusoidal alternating voltage with a maximum of 700 mV can be applied which leads to an electric field of 5–70 V/m in the surrounding bone. This approach is established for bone healing therapies. Despite the established clinical application of electrical stimulation in bone, the fundamental processes acting during this stimulation are still poorly understood. A better understanding of the influence of electric fields on cells involved in bone formation is important to improve therapy and clinical success. To study the impact of electrical fields on bone cells in vitro, Ti6Al4V electrodes were designed according to the pattern of the ASNIS III s screw for a 6-well system. Osteoblasts were seeded on collagen coated coverslip and placed centred on the bottom of each well. During four weeks the cells were stimulated 3×45 min/d and metabolic and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity as well as gene expression of cells were analysed. Furthermore, supernatants were collected and proteins typical for bone remodelling were examined. The electrical stimulation did not exert a significant influence on the metabolic activity and the ALP production in cells over time using these settings. Gene expression of BSP and ALP was upregulated after the first 3 days whereas OPG was increased in the second half after 14 days of electrical stimulation. Moreover, the concentration of the released proteins OPG, IL-6, DKK-1 and OPN increased when cells were cultivated under electrical stimulation. However, no changes could be seen for essential markers, like RANKL, Leptin, BMP-2, IL-1beta and TNF-alpha. Therefore, further studies will be done with osteoblasts and osteoclasts to study bone remodelling processes under the influence of electrical fields more in detail. This study was supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG) JO 1483/1-1


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 39 - 39
11 Apr 2023
Jones R Gilbert S Mason D
Full Access

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a common cause of chronic pain. Subchondral bone is highly innervated, and bone structural changes directly correlate with pain in OA. Mechanisms underlying skeletal–neural interactions are under-investigated. Bone derived axon guidance molecules are known to regulate bone remodelling. Such signals in the nervous system regulate neural plasticity, branching and neural inflammation. Perturbation of these signals during OA disease progression may disrupt sensory afferents activity, affecting tissue integrity, nociception, and proprioception. Osteocyte mechanical loading and IL-6 stimulation alters axon guidance signalling influencing innervation, proprioception, and nociception. Human Y201 MSC cells, embedded in 3D type I collagen gels (0.05 × 106 cell/gel) in 48 well plastic or silicone (load) plates, were differentiated to osteocytes for 7 days before stimulation with IL-6 (5ng/ml) with soluble IL-6 receptor (sIL-6r (40ng/ml) or unstimulated (n=5/group), or mechanically loaded (5000 μstrain, 10Hz, 3000 cycles) or not loaded (n=5/group). RNA extracted 1hr and 24hrs post load was quantified by RNAseq whole transcriptome analysis (NovaSeq S1 flow cell 2 × 100bp PE reads and differentially expressed neurotransmitters identified (>2-fold change in DEseq2 analysis on normalised count data with FDR p<0.05). After 24 hours, extracted IL-6 stimulated RNA was quantified by RT-qPCR for neurotrophic factors using 2–∆∆Ct method (efficiency=94-106%) normalised to reference gene GAPDH (stability = 1.12 REfinder). Normally distributed data with homogenous variances was analysed by two-tailed t test. All detected axonal guidance genes were regulated by mechanical load. Axonal guidance genes were both down-regulated (Netrin1 0.16-fold, p=0.001; Sema3A 0.4-fold, p<0.001; SEMA3C (0.4-fold, p<0.001), and up-regulated (SLIT2 2.3-fold, p<0.001; CXCL12 5-fold, p<0.001; SEMA3B 13-fold, p<0.001; SEMA4F 2-fold, p<0.001) by mechanical load. IL6 and IL6sR stimulation upregulated SEMA3A (7-fold, p=0.01), its receptor Plexin1 (3-fold, p=0.03). Neutrophins analysed in IL6 stimulated RNA did not show regulation. Here we show osteocytes regulate multiple factors which may influence innervation, nociception, and proprioception upon inflammatory or mechanical insult. Future studies will establish how these factors may combine and affect nerve activity during OA disease progression


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 45 - 45
1 Nov 2018
Barlow C Dominguez E Dixon G Crouch-Smith H Wallace R Simpson H Al-Hourani K
Full Access

Femoral shaft fractures are potentially devastating injuries. Despite this, clinical studies of the biomechanics of this injury are lacking. We aimed to clinically evaluate bone behaviour under high and low energy trauma in paediatric, adult and older patients. Single-centre retrospective study identifying all diaphyseal femoral fractures between Feb 2015-Feb 2017. Peri-prosthetic and pathological fractures were excluded. Patients were subdivided into groups 1 (paediatric, <16yo), 2 (adult, 17–55yo) and 3 (older, >55yo) to reflect immature, peak bone age and osteoporotic bone respectively. Chi-Squared analysis assessed significance of bone age to degree of comminution and fracture pattern. A p-value <0.05 was significant. A total 4130 radiographs were analysed with 206 femoral shaft fractures identified. Forty-three patients were excluded with 163 remaining. Group 1, 2 and 3 included 38, 37 and 88 patients respectively. Mean age 50.8 (SD 32.8) with male-to-female ratio of 1:1.2. Groups 1 and 3 included majority simple fractures (35/38 and 62/88 respectively). Group 2 included more comminuted injuries (33/37). Bone age to degree of comminution proved significant (p<0.05) with a bimodal distribution of simple fractures noted in groups 1 and 3. Energy to fracture was significant in group 2, where a high energy injury was associated with comminution (p<0.05). This study is the first to demonstrate an association between fracture comminution and age. Simple femoral shaft fractures showed a bimodal age distribution in paediatric and older patients regardless of mechanism energy. High energy mechanism trauma was directly related to fracture comminution at peak bone age