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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVIII | Pages 31 - 31
1 Sep 2012
Gawri R Mwale F Ouellet JA Steffen T Roughley PJ Antoniou J Haglund L
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Purpose. Disc degeneration is known to occur early in adult life, but at present there is no medical treatment to reverse or even retard the problem. Development of medical treatments is complicated by the lack of a validated long term organ culture model in which therapeutic candidates can be studied. The objective of this study was to optimize and validate an organ culture system for intact human intervertebral disc (IVD), which could be used subsequently to determine whether synthetic peptide growth factors can stimulate disc cell metabolism and initiate a repair response. Method. Seventy lumbar IVDs, from 14 individuals, were isolated within 24 h after death. Discs were prepared for organ culture by removing bony endplates but retaining cartilaginous endplates (CEP). Discs were cultured with no external load applied. The effects of glucose and FBS concentrations were evaluated. Dulbeccos Modified Eagle Media (DMEM) was supplemented with glucose, 4.5g/L or 1g/L, referred to as high and low (physiological) glucose, and FBS, 5% or 1%, referred to as high and low FBS, respectively. After a four week culture period, samples were taken across the disc using a 4 mm biopsy punch. Cell viability was analyzed using a live/dead fluorescence assay (Live/Dead, Invitrogen) and visualized by confocal microscopy. CEP discs were also placed in long term culture for four months, and cell viability was assessed. Western bolt analysis for the G1 domain of aggrecan was also performed to assess the effect of nutritional state on disc catabolism. Results. Cell viability in CEP isolated discs was evaluated after four weeks and four months of organ culture under high and physiological nutritional state. Previous studies have shown that high glucose levels are needed to maintain cell viability in organ culture, but in our model 96–98% live cells were present throughout the disc independent of FBS and glucose levels and the duration of culture tested. Western blot probing for the G1 domain of aggrecan showed no difference with the change of nutritional state across all regions indicating that low nutritional state had no detrimental effect on disc metabolism. Conclusion. We have developed a novel technique for isolation and culturing of intact IVDs. The described CEP system maintained sufficient nutrient supply and high cell survival in all regions of the disc for up to four months of culture also under physiological culturing condition. As the CEP system maintains high cell viability in long term cultures, it is a suitable model in which the regenerative effect of various bioactive peptides can be studied. The availability of an intact disc organ culture system has considerable advantage over the culture of isolated disc cells, as it maintains the cells in their unique microenvironment, so making any response to catabolic or anabolic agents more physiologically relevant


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVIII | Pages 60 - 60
1 Sep 2012
Rampersad S Petit A Ruiz JC Wertheimer MR Antoniou J Mwale F
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Purpose. A major drawback of current cartilage and intervertebral disc (IVD) tissue engineering is that human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) from osteoarthritic (OA) patients express high levels of type X collagen. Type X collagen is a marker of late stage chondrocyte hypertrophy, linked with endochondral ossification, which precedes bone formation. However, it has been shown that a novel plasma-polymer, called nitrogen-rich plasma-polymerized ethylene (PPE:N), is able to inhibit type X collagen expression in committed MSCs. The aim of this study was to determine if the decreased expression of type X collagen, induced by the PPE:N surfaces is maintained when MSCs are removed from the surface and transferred to pellet cultures in the presence of serum and growth factor free chondrogenic media. Method. Human MSCs were obtained from aspirates from the intramedullary canal of donors undergoing total hip replacement for OA. Cells were expanded for 2–3 passages and then cultured on polystyrene dishes and on two different PPE:N surfaces: high (H) and low (L) pressure deposition. Cells were transferred for 7 additional days in chondrogenic serum free media (DMEM high glucose supplemented with 2 mM L-glutamine, 20 mM HEPES, 45 mM NaHCO3, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 ug/ml streptomycin, 1 mg/ml bovine serum albumin, 5 ug/ml insulin, 50 ug/ml ascorbic acid, 5 ng/ml sodium selenite, 5 ug/ml transferrin) in pellet culture or on PS cell culture dishes. RNA was extracted using a standard TRIzol protocol. RT-PCR was realized using Superscript II (RT) and Taq polymerase (PCR) with primers specific for type I and X collagen. GAPDH was used as a housekeeping gene and served to normalize the results. Results. As observed in previous studies, type X collagen mRNA level was suppressed when cultured on both H- and L-PPE:N. HPPE:N was more effective in decreasing type X collagen expression than LPPE:N (55 vs. 78 % of control OA cells). Results also showed that the decreased type X collagen mRNA level was maintained not only when cells were removed from the PPE:N surfaces and transferred to new polystyrene culture dishes in the presence of chondrogenic media, but also when transferred to pellet cultures. Culturing MSCs from OA patients on PPE:N surfaces and in pellet culture had however no effect on the level of type I collagen mRNA. Conclusion. The present study confirmed the potential of PPE:N surfaces in suppressing type X collagen expression in MSCs from OA patients. More importantly, when these cells are transferred to pellet cultures, type X collagen suppression is maintained. These results may lead us one step closer to the production of large amounts of reprogrammed MSCs for tissue engineering applications


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVIII | Pages 34 - 34
1 Sep 2012
Gawri R Mwale F Ouellet J Steffen T Roughley P Haglund L Antoniou J
Full Access

Purpose. Disc degeneration is known to occur early in adult life, but at present there is no medical treatment to reverse or even retard the problem. Development of medical treatments is complicated by the lack of a validated long term organ culture model in which therapeutic candidates can be studied. The objective of this study was to optimize and validate an organ culture system for intact human intervertebral disc (IVD), which could be used subsequently to determine whether synthetic peptide growth factors can stimulate disc cell metabolism and initiate a repair response. Method. Seventy lumbar IVDs, from 14 individuals, were isolated within 24 h after death. Discs were prepared for organ culture by removing bony endplates but retaining cartilaginous endplates (CEP). Discs were cultured with no external load applied. The effects of glucose and FBS concentrations were evaluated. Dulbeccos Modified Eagle Media (DMEM) was supplemented with glucose, 4.5g/L or 1g/L, referred to as high and low (physiological) glucose, and FBS, 5% or 1%, referred to as high and low FBS, respectively. After a four week culture period, samples were taken across the disc using a 4 mm biopsy punch. Cell viability was analyzed using a live/dead fluorescence assay (Live/Dead, Invitrogen) and visualized by confocal microscopy. CEP discs were also placed in long term culture for four months, and cell viability was assessed. Western bolt analysis for the G1 domain of aggrecan was also performed to assess the effect of nutritional state on disc catabolism. Results. Cell viability in CEP isolated discs was evaluated after four weeks and four months of organ culture under high and physiological nutritional state. Previous studies have shown that high glucose levels are needed to maintain cell viability in organ culture, but in our model 96–98% live cells were present throughout the disc independent of FBS and glucose levels and the duration of culture tested. Western blot probing for the G1 domain of aggrecan showed no difference with the change of nutritional state across all regions indicating that low nutritional state had no detrimental effect on disc metabolism. Conclusion. We have developed a novel technique for isolation and culturing of intact IVDs. The described CEP system maintained sufficient nutrient supply and high cell survival in all regions of the disc for up to four months of culture also under physiological culturing condition. As the CEP system maintains high cell viability in long term cultures, it is a suitable model in which the regenerative effect of various bioactive peptides can be studied. The availability of an intact disc organ culture system has considerable advantage over the culture of isolated disc cells, as it maintains the cells in their unique microenvironment, so making any response to catabolic or anabolic agents more physiologically relevant


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1125 - 1132
1 Aug 2018
Shohat N Foltz C Restrepo C Goswami K Tan T Parvizi J

Aims

The aim of this study was to examine the association between postoperative glycaemic variability and adverse outcomes following orthopaedic surgery.

Patients and Methods

This retrospective study analyzed data on 12 978 patients (1361 with two operations) who underwent orthopaedic surgery at a single institution between 2001 and 2017. Patients with a minimum of either two postoperative measurements of blood glucose levels per day, or more than three measurements overall, were included in the study. Glycaemic variability was assessed using a coefficient of variation (CV). The length of stay (LOS), in-hospital complications, and 90-day readmission and mortality rates were examined. Data were analyzed with linear and generalized linear mixed models for linear and binary outcomes, adjusting for various covariates.