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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1539 - 1544
1 Nov 2007
Hibino N Hamada Y Sairyo K Yukata K Sano T Yasui N

This study was undertaken to elucidate the mechanism of biological repair at the tendon-bone junction in a rat model. The stump of the toe flexor tendon was sutured to a drilled hole in the tibia (tendon suture group, n = 23) to investigate healing of the tendon-bone junction both radiologically and histologically. Radiological and histological findings were compared with those observed in a sham control group where the bone alone was drilled (n = 19). The biomechanical strength of the repaired junction was confirmed by pull-out testing six weeks after surgery in four rats in the tendon suture group. Callus formation was observed at the site of repair in the tendon suture group, whereas in the sham group callus formation was minimal. During the pull-out test, the repaired tendon-bone junction did not fail because the musculotendinous junction always disrupted first. In order to understand the factors that influenced callus formation at the site of repair, four further groups were evaluated. The nature of the sutured tendon itself was investigated by analysing healing of a tendon stump after necrosis had been induced with liquid nitrogen in 16 cases. A proximal suture group (n = 16) and a partial tenotomy group (n = 16) were prepared to investigate the effects of biomechanical loading on the site of repair. Finally, a group where the periosteum had been excised at the site of repair (n = 16) was examined to study the role of the periosteum. These four groups showed less callus formation radiologically and histologically than did the tendon suture group. In conclusion, the sutured tendon-bone junction healed and achieved mechanical strength at six weeks after suturing, showing good local callus formation. The viability of the tendon stump, mechanical loading and intact periosteum were all found to be important factors for better callus formation at a repaired tendon-bone junction


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 287 - 287
1 Jul 2014
Semevolos S Kinsley M Duesterdieck-Zellmer K Riddick T
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Summary Statement. Differential expression of canonical and noncanonical Wnt signalling along cartilage canals and osteochondral junctions is dependent on age. Increased gene expression of PTHrP along cartilage canals and Ihh along osteochondral junctions suggests paracrine feedback in articular-epiphyseal cartilage. Introduction. Wnt signaling has been shown to regulate chondrocyte differentiation during pre-/post-natal cartilage development. In addition, parathyroid-related peptide(PTHrP) and Indian hedgehog(Ihh) create a negative feedback loop in growth cartilage, but less is known in articular cartilage. The objective of this study was to elucidate expression of regulatory molecules in chondrocytes surrounding cartilage canals and osteochondral junctions during neonatal and pre-adolescent development. We hypothesised there would be increased expression of canonical Wnt signalling molecules and Ihh in osteochondral junction chondrocytes compared to cartilage canal chondrocytes. In addition, we hypothesised that Wnt signaling and PTHrP expression would be greater in neonates than pre-adolescents. Patients & Methods. Osteochondral samples were obtained(IACUC-approved) from normal femoropatellar joints of 14 euthanised immature horses(6 neonates, 8 pre-adolescents). Samples were frozen in OCT for laser capture microdissection(LCM) or fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde and paraffin-embedded for immunohistochemistry. Chondrocytes surrounding cartilage canals and osteochondral junctions were captured using LCM. Following RNA isolation, equine-specific β-catenin, Wnt-4, Wnt-5b, Wnt-11, Dickkopf-1(Dkk-1), low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein-4,-6(Lrp4, Lrp6), Axin1, Wnt inhibitory factor-1(WIF)-1, secreted Frizzled-related protein-1,-3,-5(sFRP), retinoic acid receptor gamma(RARG), RAR-inducible serine carboxypeptidase(SC-PEP), Ihh, PTHrP, VEGF, PDGF, MMP-13, and 18S mRNA expression levels were evaluated by two-step real-time qPCR. Following immunohistochemistry using rabbit polyclonal or mouse monoclonal primary antibodies (confirmed by Western blot), spatial tissue protein expression was scored (0–3). Statistical analysis included Wilcoxon signed rank test(paired samples) or rank sum test(unpaired samples)(P<0.05). Results. Gene expression in chondrocytes along cartilage canals was significantly higher for PTHrP, β-catenin, Lrp6, Axin1, sFRP5, RARgamma, and SC-PEP than osteochondral junctions. Conversely, gene expression of Ihh, Wnt4, Wnt11, sFRP3, and VEGF were higher in osteochondral junction chondrocytes than cartilage canals. There was higher protein expression of β-catenin, PDGF, VEGF, and MMP-13 along osteochondral junctions than cartilage canals of pre-adolescents. Neonates had higher gene expression of PTHrP, Wnt-5b, sFRP3, Lrp6, and RARG in cartilage canal chondrocytes than pre-adolescents, while Ihh, Wnt-11, Lrp4, and Dkk1 were significantly higher in pre-adolescents. Immunostaining was higher for β-catenin and Wnt-11 in pre-adolescent osteochondral junction cartilage than neonates. No differences were found between age groups for Wnt-4 immunostaining. Dkk1 protein expression was significantly higher in the middle cartilage layer of pre-adolescents than neonates. Immunostaining was greater for Ihh and PTHrP in the deep cartilage layer of pre-adolescents than neonates. PDGF, VEGF, and MMP13 protein expression was higher in the superficial cartilage layer of pre-adolescents than neonates. Discussion. Wnt/β-catenin and Ihh/PTHrP signaling regulate cartilage differentiation during development and are important in endochondral ossification. This study revealed cell-specific, age-related differences in gene/protein expression of both regulatory pathways. Cells surrounding cartilage canals typically appeared small/rounded compared to larger chondrocytes along osteochondral junctions, likely due to different developmental stages. Higher PTHrP gene expression along cartilage canals and Ihh expression along osteochondral junctions may reflect these stages, suggesting paracrine feedback in articular-epiphyseal cartilage. β-catenin signaling may induce chondrocyte hypertrophy, potentially by enhancing Ihh and MMP-13 expression. Differential expression of canonical(β-catenin, Wnt-4, Lrp4, Lrp6) and noncanonical Wnt signalling(Wnt-5b, Wnt-11) and Wnt inhibitors (Dkk1, Axin1, sFRP3, sFRP5, Wif-1) surrounding cartilage canals and osteochondral junctions provides evidence of age-related interactions during postnatal development


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 20 - 20
1 Jul 2014
Lu H Hu J Zhou J Zeng Z Cao Y Chen C
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Summary Statement. We successfully delineated the 3D micro morphology of chondrocytes in patella-patellar tendon using IL-XPCT for the first time. Compared with conventional histology, IL-XPCT can not only provide a higher resolution imgaing but also keep the 3D integrity of the specimen. Introduction. The morphology of the bone-tendon junction was complex and quite different from other organs, which result the injured bone-tendon junction repair process too slowly. To study the micro morphology of the bone-tendon junction in 3D may have a great significant value to revealing the repair mechanisms of this pathological process and accelerating injured bone-tendon junction repair. However, it was hindered by the convention methods such as histologic section. In our study, a novel imaging tool, synchrotron radiation based in-line x-ray phase contrast imaging (IL-XPCT) was used to research the 3D micro morphology of the bone-tendon junction. Methods. 1) Sample Preparation: 3 patella-patellar tendons was harvested from the knee joint of New Zealand adult rabbits and was immediately fixed, rinsed in water for 2 hours. Dehydration was done using a series of graded ethanol. The sample was cut out for the CCD pixel resolution in sagittal section. 2) Image Acquisition: The IL-XPCT was performed at the BL13W1 of the Shanghai Synchrotron Radiation Facility (SSRF) in China. The CCD pixel resolution was 0.74 μm. Image Acquisition include three steps, such as the the acquisition of tomo projections, CT slices and and 3D reconstruction of patella-patellar tendon on full scale by using VG Studio Max version 2.1. 3) Histological characterization observation: After scanning, the specimen was cut to histologic sectioning and used for morphology staining by safranin O staining and H&E staining. The histological morphology then compared with the IL-XPCT imaging dateset. Results. (1) The tissue gradations of patella-patellar tendon are clearly detected by IL-XPCT. (2) The 3D reconstruction image of patella-patellar tendon sample were largely match with the histological morphology stained by safranin O and H&E in sagittal view. (3) After the image segmentation, the 3D micro morphology of the bone-tendon junction could be vividly visualised in multi-angles. Through manipulate threshold of the 3D image, we can successfully obtained the 3D morphology of the chondrocyte, and the smallest diameter is approximately 5μm. Discussion & Conclusion. In the present study, we successfully delineated the 3D micro morphological features of chondrocytes in normal patella-patellar tendon using SR-based IL-XPCT for the first time. Compared with conventional histology, IL-XPCT can not only provide a higher resolution ratio without distortion but also keep the three-dimensional integrity of the specimen. Above all, IL-XPCT opens access to a new dimension in the morphological investigation of bone-tendon junction tissues, giving important complementary information to the conventional morphological analyses in view of the three-dimensional composition of bone-tendon junction tissues, On the other hand, it could be helpful to understanding the repair processes of bone-tendon junction injury and promoting the injured bone-tendon junction repair fast and high quality


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 24 - 24
1 Apr 2017
Janssen D Bitter T Schreurs B Marriott T Khan I Verdonschot N
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Background. Fretting at modular junctions is thought to be a ‘mechanically assisted’ corrosion phenomenon, initiated by mechanical factors that lead to increased contact stresses and micromotions at the taper interface. We adopted a finite element approach to model the head-taper junction, to analyse the contact mechanics at the taper interface. We investigated the effect of assembly force and angle on contact pressures and micromotions, during loads commonly used to test hip implants, to demonstrate the importance of a good assembly during surgery. Methods. Models of the Bimetric taper and adaptor were created, with elastic-plastic material properties based on material tests with the actual implant alloy. FE contact conditions were validated against push-on and pull-off experiments. The models were loaded according to ISO 7206-4 and −6, after being assembled at 2-4-15kN, both axially and at a 30° angle. Average micromotions and contact pressures were analysed, and a wear score was calculated based on the contact pressures and micromotions. Results. The average contact pressure decreased when a higher assembly force was used, with loads being distributed over a larger contact area, but increased when tested at a 30° angle. Average micromotions reduced with a higher assembly load, except when assembled at a 30° angle. The wear score decreased with increasing assembly force, when applied perpendicularly, while when assembled at a 30° angle, the wear score did not reduce with assembly force. Conclusions. The location and patterns of micromotions were consistent with retrieved tapers and those generated in in-vitro test models. Increased impaction loads reduced the average amount of micromotion and fretting. We intend to apply more complex loading regimes in future analyses, enabling to study phenomena such as edge loading and frictional torque. Level of evidence. IIb - Experimental study. Disclosure. This study was financially supported by Biomet UK Healthcare Ltd


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 13 - 13
1 Mar 2013
Matthies A Racasan R Bills P Panagiotidou A Blunt L Skinner J Blunn G Hart A
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Material loss at the head-stem taper junction may contribute to the high early failure rates of stemmed large head metal-on-metal (LH-MOM) hip replacements. We sought to quantify both wear and corrosion and by doing so determine the main mechanism of material loss at the taper. This was a retrospective study of 78 patients having undergone revision of a LH-MOM hip replacement. All relevant clinical data was recorded. Corrosion was assessed using light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy, and graded according to a well-published classification system. We then measured the volumetric wear of the bearing and taper surfaces. Evidence of at least mild taper corrosion was seen in 90% cases, with 46% severely corroded. SEM confirmed the presence of corrosion debris, pits and fretting damage. However, volumetric wear of the taper surfaces was significantly lower than that of the bearing surfaces (p = 0.015). Our study supports corrosion as the predominant mechanism of material loss at the taper junction of LH-MOM hip replacements. Although the volume of material loss is low, the ionic products may be more biologically active compared to the particulate debris arising from the bearing surfaces


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 79 - 79
1 Nov 2018
Marani L Pardo-Figuerez M Capel AJ Nilsson Z Stolzing A Lewis MP
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Human in vitro models of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) are currently moving from embryonic stem cells to induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPSCs). With this, a robust model could be optimised for physiology and pathophysiology studies, as well as representing a drug screening platform. For this reason, the work presented here represents the optimisation of a human co-culture model of skeletal muscle (hSkM)/ iPSC-derived motor neurons (MNs) both in monolayer and in 3D tissue engineering collagen constructs. Firstly, human iPSC-derived motor neurons (MNs) were characterised over a period of 35 days to test their cholinergic potential. Then, primary human skeletal muscle (hSkM) and MNs were co-cultured on different substrates (gelatin and SureBond+ReadySet (Axol Bioscience)) and differentiated in various combinations of media to allow both myotube formation and neurite extension. Morphological (β-III Tubulin and Rhodamine Phalloidin) and interaction (α-Bungarotoxin and Synaptic Vesicle 2) immunofluorescent stainings were used to evaluate cell differentiation and co-localisation of pre and post-synaptic markers. Results from this study showed that the MNs presented a cholinergic phenotype up to 21 days; hSkM and MNs co-existed in culture and differentiated in neuronal Maintenance Medium (MM, Axol Bioscience); the 3D constructs allowed alignment and maturation of the muscle tissue, while providing a matrix for neurite extension and NMJ formation. This model has the potential to become a valid tool for in vitro drug screening while reducing the use of animals in research and providing the scientific community with a platform for personalised medicine


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 35 - 35
1 Dec 2022
Montanari S Griffoni C Cristofolini L Brodano GB
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Mechanical failure of spine posterior fixation in the lumbar region Is suspected to occur more frequently when the sagittal balance is not properly restored. While failures at the proximal extremity have been studied in the literature, the lumbar distal junctional pathology has received less attention. The aim of this work was to investigate if the spinopelvic parameters, which characterize the sagittal balance, could predict the mechanical failure of the posterior fixation in the distal lumbar region. All the spine surgeries performed in 2017-2019 at Rizzoli Institute were retrospectively analysed to extract all cases of lumbar distal junctional pathology. All the revision surgeries performed due to the pedicle screws pull-out, or the breakage of rods or screws, or the vertebral fracture, or the degenerative disc disease, in the distal extremity, were included in the junctional (JUNCT) group. A total of 83 cases were identified as JUNCT group. All the 241 fixation surgeries which to date have not failed were included in the control (CONTROL) group. Clinical data were extracted from both groups, and the main spinopelvic parameters were assessed from sagittal standing preoperative (pre-op) and postoperative (post-op) radiographs with the software Surgimap (Nemaris). In particular, pelvic incidence (PI), sagittal vertical axis (SVA), pelvic tilt (PT), T1 pelvic angle (TPA), sacral slope (SS) and lumbar lordosis (LL) have been measured. In JUNCT, the main failure cause was the screws pull-out (45%). Spine fixation with 7 or more levels were the most common in JUNCT (52%) in contrast to CONTROL (14%). In CONTROL, PT, TPA, SS and PI-LL were inside the recommended ranges of good sagittal balance. For these parameters, statistically significant differences were observed between pre-op and post-op (p<0.0001, p=0.01, p<0.0001, p=0.004, respectively, Wilcoxon test). In JUNCT, the spinopelvic parameters were out of the ranges of the good sagittal balance and the worsening of the balance was confirmed by the increase in PT, TPA, SVA, PI-LL and by the decrease of LL (p=0.002, p=0.003, p<0.0001, p=0.001, p=0.001, respectively, paired t-test) before the revision surgery. TPA (p=0.003, Kolmogorov-Smirnov test) and SS (p=0.03, unpaired t-test) differed significantly in pre-op between JUNCT and CONTROL. In post-op, PI-LL was significantly different between JUNCT and CONTROL (p=0.04, unpaired t-test). The regression model of PT vs PI was significantly different between JUNCT and CONTROL in pre-op (p=0.01, Z-test). These results showed that failure is most common in long fused segments, likely due to long lever arms leading to implant failure. If the sagittal balance is not properly restored, after the surgery the balance is expected to worsen, eventually leading to failure: this effect was confirmed by the worsening of all the spinopelvic parameters before the revision surgery in JUNCT. Conversely, a good sagittal balance seems to avoid a revision surgery, as it is visible is CONTROL. The mismatch PI-LL after the fixation seems to confirm a good sagittal balance and predict a good correction. The linear regression of PT vs PI suggests that the spine deformity and pelvic conformation could be a predictor for the failure after a fixation


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 49 - 49
11 Apr 2023
Speirs A Melkus G Rakhra K Beaule P
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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_16 | Pages 8 - 8
17 Nov 2023
Alieldin E Samir M
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Abstract. Introduction. The medial meniscus is crescent shaped and it is wider posteriorly than anteriorly. It covers up to 60 % of the articular surface of medial tibial condyle and helps with the loading distribution in the medial compartment. Meniscal lesions occur in association with ACL tears in 60 % of the time. The posterior aspect of the menisco-capsular junction is known as the meniscal rampzone. If not addressed during surgery, it could lead to unfavourable results. Objective. Incidence of ramp lesion following ACL injuries. Methods. Observational study of 100 patients at EL Hadara Main University Hospital who underwent anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. MRI and arthroscopic diagnosis was done to detect Ramp lesions associated with ACL ruptures in November 2017 till November 2019. Results. Incidence was 9%. Duration of injury and increased medial meniscal slope were associated with increased incidence of ramp lesion. MRI signs were present in 79% of cases without Ramp lesion, 100% in Cases with ramp lesion. Mode of Injury and presence of locking or giving way symptoms were not associated with increased incidence. Conclusion. The ramp lesion at the posterior aspect of the meniscus is difficult to visualize from standard anterior portals and is, therefore, frequently missed and can be underestimated. Also, there are no specific MRI signs of this lesion. The overall incidence of ramp lesions in 100 cases that had undergone ACL reconstruction in our study was 9 %. It was found also that the longer the duration from injury, the more likely ramp lesion would occur. 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. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 8 - 8
2 Jan 2024
Habash M Cawley D Devitt A
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Intra-Discal Vacuum Phenomenon (IDVP) represents an intradiscal nitrogen gas accumulation where a cavity opens in a supine position, lowering intra-discal pressure and generating a bubble. IDVP has been observed in up to 20% of elderly patients and reported in almost 50% of chronic LBP patients. With a highly accurate detection on CT, its significance lacks clarity and consideration within normative data. IDVP occurs with patterns of lumbar and/or lumbopelvic morphology and associated diagnoses. Over-60s population based sample of 2020 unrelated CT abdomen scans without acute spinal presentations, with sagittal reconstructions, inclusive of T12 to femoral heads, were analyzed for IDVP and pelvic incidence (PI). Subjects with diagnostic morphological associations of the lumbar spine, including previous fracture, autofusion, transitional vertebra and listhesis, were selected out and analyzed separately. Subjects were then equally grouped into low, medium and high PI. Prevalence of lumbar spine IDVP is 41.3%. 125 cases were excluded. 1603 subjects yielded 663 IDVP. This was increased in severity towards the lumbosacral junction (L1L2 9.4%, L2L3 10.9%, L3L4 13.7%, L4L5 19.9%, L5S1 28.5%) and those with low PI, while distribution was more even with high PI. 292 had positive diagnostic associations, which were more likely to occur at the level of isthmic spondylolisthesis, adjacent to a previous fracture or suprajacent to lumbosacral transitional vertebra (p<0.05). This study has identified normative values for prevalence and severity of IDVP in a normal aging population. Morphological patterns that influence the pattern of IVDP such as pelvic incidence and diagnostic associations provide novel insights to the function of the aging spine


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 16 - 16
11 Apr 2023
Buchholz A Łapaj Ł Herbster M Gehring J Bertrand J Lohmann C Döring J
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In 2020 almost 90% of femoral heads for total hip implants in Germany were made of ceramic. Nevertheless, the cellular interactions and abrasion mechanisms in vivo have not been fully understood until now. Metal transfer from the head-neck taper connection, occurring as smear or large-area deposit, negatively influences the surface quality of the articulating bearing. In order to prevent metal transfer, damage patterns of 40 Biolox delta ceramic retrievals with CoC and CoPE bearings were analysed. A classification of damage type and severity for each component (n=40) was done according to an established scoring system. To investigate the physical properties, the surface quality was measured using confocal microscopy, quantitative analysis of phase composition were performed by Raman spectroscopy and qualitative analysis of metal traces was done by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX). The periprosthetic tissue was analysed for abrasion particles with SEM and EDX. Both bearing types show different damage patterns. Dotted/ drizzled metal smears were identified in 82 % of CoC (n=16) and 96 % of CoPE (n=24) bearings. Most traces on the ceramic heads were identified in the proximal area while they were observed predominantly in the distal area for the ceramic inlays. The identified marks are similar to those of metallic bearings. Metallic smears lead to an increase of up to 30 % in the monoclinic crystalline phase of the ceramic. The roughness increases by up to six times to Ra=48 nm. Ceramic and metallic wear particles from the articulating surfaces or head neck taper junctions were found in the periprosthetic tissue. Damage patterns on CoC hip implants seem to be similar to those of metallic implants. More detailed analysis of CoC implants are needed to understand the described damage patterns and provide advice for prevention


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 38 - 38
4 Apr 2023
Döring J Basten S Ecke M Herbster M Kirsch B Halle T Lohmann C Bertrand J Aurich J
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Reducing wear of endoprosthetic implants is still an important goal in order to increase the life time of the implant. Endoprosthesis failure can be caused by many different mechanisms, such as abrasive wear, corrosion, fretting or foreign body reactions due to wear accumulation. Especially, modular junctions exhibit high wear rates and corrosion due to micromotions at the connection of the individual components. The wear generation of cobalt-chromium-molybdenum alloys (CoCrMo) is strongly influenced by the microstructure. Therefore, the aim of this work is to investigate the subsurface phase transformation by deep rolling manufacturing processes in combination with a “sub-zero” cooling strategy. We analyzed the influence on the phase structure and the mechanical properties of wrought CoCr28Mo6 alloy (ISO 5832-12) by a deep rolling manufacturing process at various temperatures (+25°C,-10°C,-35°C) and different normal forces (700N and 1400N). Surface (S. a. ,S. z. ) and subsurface characteristics (residual stress) as well as biological behavior were investigated for a potential implant application. We showed that the microstructure of CoCr28Mo6 wrought alloy changes depending on applied force and temperature. The face centered cubic (fcc) phase could be transformed to a harder hexagonal-close-packed (hcp) phase structure in the subsurface. The surface could be smoothed (up to S. a. = 0.387 µm±0.185 µm) and hardened (≥ 700 HV 0.1) at the same time. The residual stress was increased by more than 600% (n=3). As a readout for metabolic activity of MonoMac (MM6) and osteosarcoma (SaOS-2) cells a WST assay (n=3) was used. The cells showed no significant negative effect of the sub-zero manufacturing process. We showed that deep rolling in combination with an innovative cooling strategy for the manufacturing process has a great potential to improve the mechanical properties of CoCr28Mo6 wrought alloy, by subsurface hardening and phase transformation for implant applications


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 93 - 93
11 Apr 2023
de Angelis N Beaule P Speirs A
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Femoro-acetabular impingement involves a deformity of the hip joint and is associated with hip osteoarthritis. Although 15% of the asymptomatic population exhibits a deformity, it is not clear who will develop symptoms. Current diagnostic imaging measures have either low specificity or low sensitivity and do not consider the dynamic nature of impingement during daily activities. The goal of this study is to determine stresses in the cartilage, subchondral bone and labrum of normal and impinging hips during activities such as walking and sitting down. Quantitative CT scans were obtained of a healthy Control and a participant with a symptomatic femoral cam deformity (‘Bump’). 3D models of the hip were created from automatic segmentation of CT scans. Cartilage layers were added so the articular surface was the mid-line of the joint. Finite element meshes were generated in each region. Bone elastic modulus was assigned element-by-element, calculated from CT intensity converted to bone mineral density using a calibration phantom. Cartilage was modelled as poroelastic, E=0.467 MPa, v=0.167, and permeability 3×10. -16. m. 4. /N s. The pelvis was fixed while rotations and contact forces from Bergmann et al. (2001) were applied to the femur over one load cycle for walking and sitting in a chair. All analyses were performed in FEBio. High shear stresses were seen near the acetabular cartilage-labrum junction in the Bump model, up to 0.12 MPa for walking and were much higher than in the Control. Patient-specific modelling can be used to assess contact and tissue stresses during different activities to better understand the risk of degeneration in individuals, especially for activities that involve high hip flexion. The high stresses at the cartilage labrum interface could explain so-called bucket-handle tears of the labrum


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. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 15 - 15
17 Nov 2023
Mondal S Mangwani J Brockett C Gulati A Pegg E
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Abstract. Objectives. This abstract provides an update on the Open Ankle Models being developed at the University of Bath. The goal of this project is to create three fully open-source finite element (FE) ankle models, including bones, ligaments, and cartilages, appropriate musculoskeletal loading and boundary conditions, and heterogeneous material property distribution for a standardised representation of ankle biomechanics and pre-clinical ankle joint analysis. Methods. A computed tomography (CT) scan data (pixel size of 0.815 mm, and slice thickness of 1 mm) was used to develop the 3D geometry of the bones (tibia, talus, calcaneus, fibula, and navicular). Each bone was given the properties of a heterogeneous elastic material based on the CT greyscale. The density values for each bone element were calculated using a linear empirical relation, ρ= 0.0405 + (0.000918) HU and then power law equations were utilised to get the Young's Modulus value for each bone element [1]. At the bone junction, a thickness of cartilage ranging from 0.5–1 mm, and was modelled as a linear material (E=10 MPa, ν=0.4 [2]). All ligament insertions and positions were represented by four parallel spring elements, and the ligament stiffness and material attributes were applied in accordance with the published literature [2]. The ankle model was subjected to static loading (balance standing position). Four noded tetrahedral elements were used for the discretization of bones and cartilages. All degrees of freedom were restricted at the proximal ends of the tibia and fibula. The ground reaction forces were applied at the underneath of the calcaneus bone. The interaction between the cartilages and bones was modelled using an augmented contact algorithm with a sliding elastic contact between each cartilage. A tied elastic contact was used between the cartilages and the bone. FEbio 2.1.0 (University of Utah, USA) was used to construct the open-source ankle model. Results. When the double-legged stance phase loading condition was taken into consideration, stress at the antero-medial tibial wall (ranged from 1 to 7 MPa) was found to be similar to the prior work [2], indicating bulk of the load transfer was through this region. The maximum principal strain was predicted at the different regions on bones around the ankle joint. The proximal surface of the talus, and tibial distal surface were shown to have the highest maximum principal strains followed by antero-medial walls of the tibia bone, at the proximal location. Conclusions. The present open 3D FE model of the ankle will assist researchers in better understanding ankle biomechanics, precisely predicting load transfer, and examining the ankle to address unmet clinical needs for this joint. The results of the current investigation are realistic in terms of load transfer and stress-strain distribution across the ankle joint and well comparable to those reported in the literature [2]. However, sensitivity and ankle instability simulations will be performed in future work to investigate the model's reliability and robustness. 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_4 | Pages 81 - 81
1 Mar 2021
Roth AK Willem PC van Rhijn LW Arts JJ Ito K van Rietbergen B
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Currently, between 17% of patients undergoing surgery for adult spinal deformity experience severe instrumentation related problems such as screw pullout or proximal junctional failure necessitating revision surgery. Cables may be used to reinforce pedicle screw fixation as an additive measure or may provide less rigid fixation at the construct end levels in order to prevent junctional level problems. The purpose of this study is to provide insight into the maximum expected load during flexion in UHMWPE cable in constructs intended for correction of adult spine deformity (degenerative scoliosis) in the PoSTuRe first-in-man clinical trial. Following the concept of toppinoff, a new construct is proposed with screw/cable fixation of rods at the lower levels and standalone UHMWPE cables at the upper level (T11). A parametric FE model of the instrumented thoracolumbar spine, which has been previously validated, was used to represent the construct. Pedicle screws are modeled by assigning a rigid tie constraint between the rod and the lamina of the corresponding spinal level. Cables are modeled using linear elastic line elements, fixing the rod to the lamina medially at the cranial laminar end and laterally at the caudal laminar end. A Youngs modulus was assigned such that the stiffness of the line element was the same as that of the cable. An 8 Nm flexion moment was applied to the cranial endplate. The maximum value of the force in the wire (80 N) is found at the T11 (upper) level. At the other levels, forces in the cable are very small because most of the force is carried by the screw (T12) or because the wires are force shielded by the contralateral and adjacent level pedicle screws (L2, L3). The model provides first estimates of the forces that can be expected in the UHMWPE cables in constructs for kyphosis correction during movement. It is expected that this approach can help in defining the number of wires for optimal treatment


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 6, Issue 1 | Pages 52 - 56
1 Jan 2017
Hothi HS Kendoff D Lausmann C Henckel J Gehrke T Skinner J Hart A

Objectives. Mechanical wear and corrosion at the head-stem junction of total hip arthroplasties (THAs) (trunnionosis) have been implicated in their early revision, most commonly in metal-on-metal (MOM) hips. We can isolate the role of the head-stem junction as the predominant source of metal release by investigating non-MOM hips; this can help to identify clinically significant volumes of material loss and corrosion from these surfaces. Methods. In this study we examined a series of 94 retrieved metal-on-polyethylene (MOP) hips for evidence of corrosion and material loss at the taper junction using a well published visual grading method and an established roundness-measuring machine protocol. Hips were retrieved from 74 male and 20 female patients with a median age of 57 years (30 to 76) and a median time to revision of 215 months (2 to 324). The reasons for revision were loosening of both the acetabular component and the stem (n = 29), loosening of the acetabular component (n = 58) and infection (n = 7). No adverse tissue reactions were reported by the revision surgeons. Results. Evidence of corrosion was observed in 55% of hips. The median Goldberg taper corrosion score was 2 (1 to 4) and the annual rate of material loss at the taper was 0.084 mm. 3. /year (0 to 0.239). The median trunnion corrosion score was 1 (1 to 3). Conclusions. We have reported a level of trunnionosis for MOP hips with large-diameter heads that were revised for reasons other than trunnionosis, and therefore may be clinically insignificant. Cite this article: H. S. Hothi, D. Kendoff, C. Lausmann, J. Henckel, T. Gehrke, J. Skinner, A. Hart. Clinically insignificant trunnionosis in large-diameter metal-on-polyethylene total hip arthroplasty. Bone Joint Res 2017;6:52–56. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.61.BJR-2016-0150.R2


Abstract. Objectives. The principle of osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture (OVCF) is fixing instability, providing anterior support, and decompression. Contraindication for vertebroplasty is anterior or posterior wall fracture. The study objectives was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of vertebroplasty with short segmented PMMA cement augmented pedicle screws for OVCF with posterior/anterior wall fracture patients. Methods. A retrospective study of 24 patients of DGOU type-4 (vertebra plana) OVCF with posterior/anterior wall fracture, were treated by vertebroplasty and short segment PMMA cement augmented pedicle screws fixation. Radiological parameters (kyphosis angle and compression ratio) and clinical parameters Visual analogue scale (VAS) and Oswestry disability index (ODI) were analysed. Results. A significant improvement was noted in VAS (preoperative, 7.90 ±0.60; final follow-up 2.90 ± 0.54) and ODI (77.10 ± 6.96 to 21.30 ± 6.70), (P < 0.05). Neurological improvement was noted in all patients. Kyphosis corrected significantly from preoperative 23.20±5.90 to 5.30±1.40 postoperative with 5% (3.30± 2.95) loss of correction at final follow-up. Anterior vertebral height restored significantly from 55.80±11.9% t0 87.6±13.1% postoperative with 4.5±4.0% loss at final follow-up. One case had cement leakage was found, but the patient is asymptomatic. No implant-related complication was seen. No iatrogenic dural or nerve injury. Conclusions. Treatment with vertebroplasty with cement augmented screw fixation and direct decompression is a great option in treating such a complex situation in fragile age with fragile bones because It provides anterior support with cementing that avoids corpectomy. Short segment fixation has less stress risers at the junctional area


Abstract. Objectives. To evaluate the safety and efficacy of vertebroplasty with short segmented cement augmented pedicle screws fixation for severe osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures (OVCF) with posterior/anterior wall fractured patients. Methods. A retrospective study of 24 patients of DGOU type-4 (vertebra plana) OVCF with posterior/anterior wall fracture, were treated by vertebroplasty and short segment PMMA cement augmented pedicle screws fixation. Radiological parameters (kyphosis angle and compression ratio) and clinical parameters Visual analogue scale (VAS) and Oswestry disability index (ODI) were analysed. Results. A significant improvement was noted in VAS (preoperative, 7.90 ± 0.60; final follow-up 2.90 ± 0.54) and ODI (77.10 ± 6.96 to 21.30 ± 6.70), (P < 0.05). Neurological improvement was noted in all patients. Kyphosis corrected significantly from preoperative 23.20 ± 5.90 to 5.30 ± 1.40 postoperative with 5% (3.30 ± 2.95) loss of correction at final follow-up. Anterior vertebral height restored significantly from 55.80 ± 11.9% to 87.6 ± 13.1% postoperative with 4.5 ± 4.0% loss at final follow-up. One case had cement leakage was found, but the patient is asymptomatic. No implant-related complication was seen. No iatrogenic dural or nerve injury. Conclusions. Treatment with vertebroplasty with cement augmented screw fixation and direct decompression is a great option in treating such a complex situation in fragile age with fragile bones because. Vertebroplasty is viable option for restoring vertebral anterior column in patients who are considered as contraindications for vertebroplasty, like DGOU-4. It provides anterior support avoiding corpectomy, minimise blood loss and also duration of surgery. Addition of short segment fixation gives adequate support with less stress risers at the junctional area


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 31 - 31
1 Nov 2018
O'Connor JP
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Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) activity is necessary for fracture healing to proceed normally. In most cell types, COX-2 is inductively expressed and acts in a coordinated pathway to produce prostaglandins, which affect many physiological processes including inflammation. In the fracture callus, however, COX-2 expression and the molecular and cellular processes affected by COX-2 activity remain poorly understood. Using LC-MS/MS and xMAP, we measured fracture callus prostaglandin and inflammatory cytokine levels. We found that inflammatory cytokines rapidly peaked after fracture before declining to normal levels by day 4 after fracture. However, callus prostaglandin levels did not peak until 4 days after fracture before returning to normal levels by day 10. We used immunohistochemistry to detected COX-2 expression in callus cells and found that COX-2 was expressed in callus chondrocytes and osteoclasts during endochondral ossification, including those osteoclasts at the callus chondro-osseous junction. Targeted deletion of the COX-2 gene (Ptgs2) in osteoclasts or in chondrocytes was found to delay fracture healing. Using cell-based experiments, we found that COX-2 expression could be induced in osteoclasts by osteopontin treatment, suggesting an integrin-dependent induction of COX-2 expression in osteoclasts. This was confirmed in vivo using mice lacking osteopontin or integrin ß3. Immunohistochemistry also showed abundant osteopontin expression at the callus chondro-osseous junction. The results indicate that COX-2 expression in osteoclasts is controlled by integrin-dependent signalling, that COX-2 expression in osteoclasts and chondrocytes is necessary for fracture healing to proceed normally, and that COX-2 expression in chondro-osseous junction osteoclasts may be induced by osteopontin-dependent signalling by chondrocytes