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Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 3, Issue 9 | Pages 262 - 272
1 Sep 2014
Gumucio J Flood M Harning J Phan A Roche S Lynch E Bedi A Mendias C

Objectives

Rotator cuff tears are among the most common and debilitating upper extremity injuries. Chronic cuff tears result in atrophy and an infiltration of fat into the muscle, a condition commonly referred to as ‘fatty degeneration’. While stem cell therapies hold promise for the treatment of cuff tears, a suitable immunodeficient animal model that could be used to study human or other xenograft-based therapies for the treatment of rotator cuff injuries had not previously been identified.

Methods

A full-thickness, massive supraspinatus and infraspinatus tear was induced in adult T-cell deficient rats. We hypothesised that, compared with controls, 28 days after inducing a tear we would observe a decrease in muscle force production, an accumulation of type IIB fibres, and an upregulation in the expression of genes involved with muscle atrophy, fibrosis and inflammation.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 96 - 96
1 Jul 2014
Geurts J Patel A Helmrich U Hirschmann M Müller-Gerbl M Valderrabano V Hügle T
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Summary Statement. Cross-talk between cells from immune and bone system might play a role in molecular regulation of subchondral bone sclerosis in osteoarthritis. Macrophages, B-lymphocytes and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase activity are specifically increased in sclerotic subchondral bone of patients with knee osteoarthritis. Background. Recent investigations have provided substantial evidence that distinct molecular and morphological changes in subchondral bone tissue, most notably sclerosis, play an active and important role in the pathogenesis of OA. The cellular and molecular regulation of this pathological process remains poorly understood. Here, we investigated whether osteoimmunology, the reciprocal signaling between cells from the immune and bone system, is involved in OA subchondral bone sclerosis. Patients & Methods. Tibial plateaus and informed consent were obtained from patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty due to end-stage OA. Subchondral bone mineralization distribution was analyzed using computed tomography osteoabsoptiometry (CT-OAM) and standardised cryosections of low (non-sclerotic) and high (sclerotic) bone mineralization were prepared (n=18 each). Cartilage degeneration was graded in Safranin-O-stained sections using the Mankin scoring system. The presence of T-lymphocytes, B-cells and macrophages was assessed using immunohistochemical staining of their respective surface markers CD3, CD20 and CD68. Osteoclast activity was visualised by staining of the enzyme marker tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP). Cellular characterization of ex vivo subchondral bone outgrowth cultures was performed using alkaline phosphatase (ALP), TRAP staining. Correlation between histological parameters was assessed using Spearman's rank correlation. Statistical differences were calculated using Wilcoxon signed rank test or paired t-test, where appropriate. Results. CT-OAM revealed a heterogeneous distribution of subchondral bone mineralization in OA tibial plateaus, displaying focal areas of sclerosis that overlapped macroscopically with areas of cartilage damage. These data were confirmed at the histological level by a strong correlation between Mankin score and grade of sclerosis (r=0.7, p<0.001). Immunohistochemistry showed that CD20. +. , but not CD3. +. , lymphocytes and CD68. +. mononuclear (macrophage) and multinucleated (osteoclast) cells were present in subchondral marrow spaces. Notably, the number of CD20. +. lymphocytes and CD68. +. cells was significantly (p<0.05) increased in sclerotic subchondral bone. Enhanced osteoclast activity was confirmed by a significantly increased (p<0.05) number of multinucleated and mononuclear TRAP. +. cells in sclerotic bone. Finally, the number of CD68. +. cells was strongly correlated (p<0.001) with Mankin score (r=0.7), grade of sclerosis (r=0.8), CD20. +. lymphocytes (r=0.8), and TRAP-positive cells (r=0.9). Outgrowth cultures of subchondral bone showed cells of different morphologies including fibroblast-shaped osteoblasts and macrophage-like cells. Expression of ALP was detected in the prior, while TRAP expression was evident in the latter. Corresponding with histological analyses, the number of TRAP. +. cells was increased in ex vivo outgrowth cultures of sclerotic compared to non-sclerotic subchondral bone. Conclusions. Together, our data suggest that osteoimmunological mechanisms, specifically the interaction of CD68. +. macrophages with bone-resident cells, play a - previously unknown - role in regulating subchondral bone sclerosis in progressive OA. Targeting osteoimmunology might hold potential as a disease-modifying treatment for OA


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 91-B, Issue 6 | Pages 835 - 842
1 Jun 2009
Hart AJ Skinner JA Winship P Faria N Kulinskaya E Webster D Muirhead-Allwood S Aldam CH Anwar H Powell JJ

We carried out a cross-sectional study with analysis of the demographic, clinical and laboratory characteristics of patients with metal-on-metal hip resurfacing, ceramic-on-ceramic and metal-on-polyethylene hip replacements. Our aim was to evaluate the relationship between metal-on-metal replacements, the levels of cobalt and chromium ions in whole blood and the absolute numbers of circulating lymphocytes. We recruited 164 patients (101 men and 63 women) with hip replacements, 106 with metal-on-metal hips and 58 with non-metal-on-metal hips, aged < 65 years, with a pre-operative diagnosis of osteoarthritis and no pre-existing immunological disorders.

Laboratory-defined T-cell lymphopenia was present in13 patients (15%) (CD8+ lymphopenia) and 11 patients (13%) (CD3+ lymphopenia) with unilateral metal-on-metal hips. There were significant differences in the absolute CD8+ lymphocyte subset counts for the metal-on-metal groups compared with each control group (p-values ranging between 0.024 and 0.046). Statistical modelling with analysis of covariance using age, gender, type of hip replacement, smoking and circulating metal ion levels, showed that circulating levels of metal ions, especially cobalt, explained the variation in absolute lymphocyte counts for almost all lymphocyte subsets.