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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 84 - 84
2 Jan 2024
Taheri S Yoshida T Böker KO Foerster R Jochim L Flux A Grosskopf B Hawellek T Lehmann W Schilling A
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Articular cartilage (AC) and subchondral bone (SB) are intimately intertwined, forming a complex unit called the AC-SB interface. Our recent studies have shown that cartilage and bone marrow are connected by a three-dimensional network of microchannels (i.e. cartilage-bone marrow microchannel connector; CMMC), which differ microarchitecturally in number, size and morphology depending on the maturation stage of the bone and the region of the joint. However, the pathological significance of CMMC is largely unknown. Here, we quantitatively assessed how CMMC microarchitecture relates to cartilage condition and regional differences in early idiopathic osteoarthritis (OA). Two groups of cadaveric female human femoral heads (intact cartilage vs early cartilage lesions) were identified and biopsy-based high-resolution micro-CT imaging was used. Subchondral bone (SB) thickness, CMMC number, maximum and minimum CMMC size, and CMMC morphology were quantified and compared between the two groups. The effect of joint region and cartilage condition on each dependent variable was examined. The number and morphology of CMMCs were influenced by the region of the joint, but not by the cartilage condition. On the other hand, the minimum and maximum CMMC size was modified by both joint location and cartilage condition. The smallest CMMCs were consistently found in the load bearing region (LBR) of the joint. Compared to healthy subjects, the size of the microchannels was increased in early OA, most notably in the non-load bearing region (NLBR) and the peripheral rim (PR) of the femoral head. In addition, subchondral bone thinning was observed in early OA as a localized event associated with areas of partial chondral defect. Our data suggest an enlargement of the SB microchannel network and a collective structural deterioration of the SB in early idiopathic OA


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 142 - 142
11 Apr 2023
Algarni M Amin A Hall A
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Cartilage degeneration and loss are key events in the initiation and progression of osteoarthritis (OA). Changes to chondrocyte volume and morphology (in the form of cytoplasmic processes) and thus cell phenotype are implicated, as they lead to the production of a mechanically-weakened extracellular matrix. The chondrocyte cytoskeleton is intimately linked to cell volume and morphology and hence we have investigated alterations to levels and distribution of chondrocyte F-actin that occur during early OA. The femoral heads (FH) from hip joints (N=16) were obtained with ethical permission and patient consent following femoral neck fracture. Cartilage was assessed as grade 0 (non-degenerate) and grade 1 (superficial fibrillation) using OARSI criteria. In situ chondrocyte volume and F-actin distribution were assessed using the fluorescent indicators (5-chloromethyl fluorescein diacetate (CMFDA)) and phalloidin, and imaged and quantified by confocal microscopy, Imaris. TM. and ImageJ software. There were no differences between the volume or total F-actin levels of in situ chondrocytes within the superficial zone of grade 0 (n=164 cells) compared to grade 1 (n=145) cartilage (P>0.05). However, a more detailed analysis of phalloidin labelling was performed, which demonstrated significant increases in both intense punctuate (IP) or intense areas (IA) (P<0.0001; P=0.0175 respectively). A preliminary analysis of IP and IA F-actin labelling suggested that while the former did not appear to be associated with changes to chondrocyte morphology, most of the cytoplasmic processes were associated with the presence of IA at the starting point of the protrusion. These results demonstrate marked changes to F-actin distribution in chondrocytes in the very early stages of cartilage degeneration as occurs in OA. These subtle changes are probably an early indication of a change to the chondrocyte phenotype and thus worthy of further study as they may lead to deleterious alterations to matrix metabolism and ultimately cartilage weakening


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 71 - 71
1 Mar 2021
Pattappa G Krueckel J Johnstone B Docheva D Zellner J Angele P
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Osteoarthritis (OA) is a progressive and degenerative joint disease resulting in changes to articular cartilage. In focal early OA defects, autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) has a 2-fold failure rate due to poor graft integration and presence of inflammatory factors (e.g. Interleukin-1β). Bone marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are an alternative cell source for cell-based treatments due to their chondrogenic capacity, though in vivo implantation leads to bone formation. In vivo, chondrocytes reside under an oxygen tension between 2–7% oxygen or physioxia. Physioxia enhances MSC chondrogenesis with reduced hypertrophic marker (collagen X and MMP13) expression compared to hyperoxic conditions (20% oxygen). This study sought to understand whether implantation of physioxic preconditioned MSCs improves cartilage regeneration in an early OA defect model compared to hyperoxic MSCs. Bone marrow extracted from New Zealand white rabbits (male: 5–6 months old; n = 6) was split equally for expansion under 2% (physioxia) or 20% (hyperoxia) oxygen. Chondrogenic pellets (2 × 105 cells/pellet) formed at passage 1 were cultured in the presence of TGF-β1 under their expansion conditions and measured for their wet weight and GAG content after 21 days. During bone marrow extraction, a dental drill (2.5mm diameter) was applied to medial femoral condyle on both the right and left knee and left untreated for 6 weeks. Following this period, physioxia and hyperoxia preconditioned MSCs were seeded into a hyaluronic acid (TETEC) hydrogel. Fibrous tissue was scraped and then MSC-hydrogel was injected into the right (hyperoxic MSCs) and left (physioxia MSCs) knee. Additional control rabbits with drilled defects had fibrous tissue scrapped and then left untreated without MSC-hydrogel treatment for the duration of the experiment. Rabbits were sacrificed at 6 (n = 3) and 12 (n = 3) weeks post-treatment, condyles harvested, decalcified in 10% EDTA and sectioned using a cryostat. Region of interest was identified; sections stained with Safranin-O/Fast green and evaluated for cartilage regeneration using the Sellers scoring system by three blinded observers. Physioxic culture of rabbit MSCs showed significantly shorter doubling time and greater cell numbers compared to hyperoxic culture (∗p < 0.05). Furthermore, physioxia enhanced MSC chondrogenesis via significant increases in pellet wet weight and GAG content (∗p < 0.05). Implantation of physioxic preconditioned MSCs showed significantly improved cartilage regeneration (Mean Sellers score = 7 ± 3; ∗p < 0.05) compared to hyperoxic MSCs (Sellers score = 12 ± 2) and empty defects (Sellers score = 17 ± 3). Physioxia enhances in vitro rabbit MSC chondrogenesis. Subsequent in vivo implantation of physioxia preconditioned MSCs improved cartilage regeneration in an early OA defect model compared to hyperoxic MSCs. Future studies will investigate the mechanisms for enhanced in vivo regeneration using physioxia preconditioned MSCs


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 38 - 38
1 Apr 2018
Pattappa G Hofmeister I Seja J Zellner J Johnstone B Docheva D Angele P
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Osteoarthritis is a degenerative disease mainly caused by aging, although in younger patients (aged 25 – 50) it can be a consequence of sports-related injuries or trauma. This results in early osteoarthritis with subsequent changes in cartilage extracellular matrix. Cell-based tissue engineering approaches using mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are an ideal cell type for the treatment of early osteoarthritc defects. Our group has demonstrated in a clinical study, that interleukin-1β (IL-1β) was expressed in cartilage plugs from patients with early osteoarthritis. In vitro studies have shown that IL-1β inhibits cartilage formation in chondrocytes or MSCs undergoing chondrogenesis. However, these studies show complete inhibition of tissue formation, whereas in the context of early osteoarthritis, cartilage extracellular matrix remains around the defect site. Thus, the present study sought to develop a model mimicking early osteoarthritis using MSCs. Method. Human MSCs (Male donors; aged 18–60 years, n = 6) were isolated from bone marrow and expanded in culture for one passage. 2 × 10. 5. MSCs were aliquoted into wells of a 96-well cell culture plate in the presence of 10ng/ml TGF-β. 1. or in combination with IL-1β administered at a range of concentrations (0.1, 0.5, 1 and 10ng/ml) and centrifuged to form pellets. Pellets were removed from culture on days 7, 14 and 21. Pellets were evaluated for wet weight, pellet area, histological (DMMB staining, collagen type I, II, MMP-13 and TGF-β receptor II) and collagen type II ELISA analysis. Results. Chondrogenic pellets in the presence of IL-1β demonstrated a dose-dependant inhibition in chondrogenesis. Concentrations equal or greater than 0.5ng/ml IL-1β showed significant reduction (p < 0.05) in pellet area and wet weight, with no positive staining for collagen type I, II (including ELISA analysis) and DMMB. However, at 0.1ng/ml IL-1β, despite a slight reduction in pellet area, positive staining for collagen type I, II and DMMB was observed. Furthermore, MMP-13 matrix staining was increased and TGF-b receptor II staining was decreased in pellets at IL-1β concentrations above 0.5ng/ml. Discussion. A dose dependant catabolic response in cartilage extracellular matrix formation was demonstrated for IL-1β treated MSCs undergoing chondrogenesis. At concentrations equal or greater than 0.5ng/ml IL-1β, MMP13 expression was observed in the matrix, indicative of osteoarthritis. Furthermore, there was reduced expression of TGF-β receptor II under these conditions that is required for TGF-b induced chondrogenesis. However, at 0.1ng/ml IL-1β, a reduced catabolic response in extracellular matrix components was observed, whilst showing a moderate expression in MMP-13 and the presence of cellular TGF-β receptor II expression. Therefore, this latter model may be used to develop pro-chondrogenic strategies for the treatment of early osteoarthritic defects


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 79 - 79
1 Jan 2017
Zaffagnini S Signorelli C Bontempi M Bragonzoni L Raggi F Marchiori G Lopomo N Marcacci M
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Anterior cruciate ligament (acl) reconstruction is one of the most commonly performed procedures in orthopedics for acl injury. While literature suggest short-term good-to-excellent functional results, a significant number of long-term studies report unexplained early oa development, regardless type of reconstruction. The present study reports the feasibility analysis and development of a clinical protocol, integrating different methodologies, able to determine which acl reconstruction technique could have the best chance to prevent oa. It gives also clinicians an effective tool to minimize the incidence of early oa. A prospective clinical trial was defined to evaluate clinical outcome, biochemical changes in cartilage, biomechanical parameters and possible development of oa. The most common reconstruction techniques were selected for this study, including hamstring single-bundle, single-bundle with extraarticular tenodesis and anatomical double-bundle. Power analysis was performed in terms of changes at cartilage level measurable by mri with t2 mapping. A sample size of 42 patients with isolated traumatic acl injury were therefore identified, considering a possible 10% to follow-up. Subjects presenting skeletal immaturity, degenerative tear of acl, other potential risk factors of oa and previous knee surgery were excluded. Included patients were randomized and underwent one of the 3 specified reconstruction techniques. The patients were evaluated pre-operatively, intra-operatively and post-operatively at 4 and 18 months of follow-up. Clinical evaluation were performed at each time using subjective scores (koos) and generic health status (sf-12). The activity level were documented (marx) as well as objective function (ikdc). Preliminary results allow to verify kinematic patterns during active tasks, including level walking, stair descending and squatting using dynamic roentgen sterephotogrammetric analysis (rsa) methodology before and after the injured ligament reconstruction. Intra-operative kinematics was also available by using a dedicated navigation system, thus to verify knee laxity at the time of surgery. Additionally, non-invasive assessment was possible both before the reconstruction and during the whole follow-up period by using inertial sensors. Integrating 3d models with kinematic data, estimation of contact areas of stress patterns on cartilage was also possible. The presented integrate protocol allowed to acquired different types of information concerning clinical assessment, biochemical changes in cartilage and biomechanical parameters to identify which acl reconstruction could present the most chondroprotective behavior. Preliminary data showed all the potential of the proposed workflow. The study is on-going and final results will be shortly provided


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 6 | Pages 906 - 912
1 Aug 2003
Ding M Odgaard A Hvid I Hvid I

We obtained medial and lateral subchondral cancellous bone specimens from ten human postmortem proximal tibiae with early osteoarthritis (OA) and ten normal age- and gender-matched proximal tibiae. The specimens were scanned by micro-CT and the three-dimensional microstructural properties were quantified. Medial OA cancellous bone was significantly thicker and markedly plate-like, but lower in mechanical properties than normal bone. Similar microstructural changes were also observed for the lateral specimens from OA bone, although there had been no sign of cartilage damage. The increased trabecular thickness and density, but relatively decreased connectivity suggest a mechanism of bone remodelling in early OA as a process of filling trabecular cavities. This process leads to a progressive change of trabeculae from rod-like to plate-like, the opposite to that of normal ageing. The decreased mechanical properties of subchondral cancellous bone in OA, which are due to deterioration in architecture and density, indicate poor bone quality


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 99 - 99
1 Jul 2014
Morsi E Eid T Hadhoud M Elseedy A
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Summary Statement

This work proved by prospective clinical and radiological controlled study that the best regimen for treatment of early KOA is combination of NSAIDS, physiotherapy, vasoprotective and vasodilator drugs, and alendronate.

Introduction

There is controversy in the literatures regarding the best treatment for early knee osteoarthritis because there is a more controversy regarding the initiating factor of KOA The Objectives of this work were to evaluate the efficacy of various treatment regimens for the prevention of progression of early knee osteoarthritis (KOA). Also, to elucidate the factors for initiation and progression of KOA


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 79 - 79
17 Apr 2023
Stockmann A Grammens J Lenz J Pattappa G von Haver A Docheva D Zellner J Verdonk P Angele P
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Partial meniscectomy patients have a greater likelihood for the development of early osteoarthritis (OA). To prevent the onset of early OA, patient-specific treatment algorithms need to be created that predict patient risk to early OA after meniscectomy. The aim of this work was to identify patient-specific risk factors in partial meniscectomy patients that could potentially lead to early OA. Partial meniscectomy patients operated between 01/2017 and 12/2019 were evaluated in the study (n=317). Exclusion criteria were other pathologies or surgeries for the evaluated knee and meniscus (n = 114). Following informed consent, an online questionnaire containing demographics and the “Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score” (KOOS) questionnaire was sent to the patient. Based on the KOOS pain score, patients were classified into “low” (> 75) and “high” (< 75) risk patients, indicating risk to symptomatic OA. The “high risk” patients also underwent a follow-up including an MRI scan to understand whether they have developed early OA. From 203 participants, 96 patients responded to the questionnaire (116 did not respond) with 61 patients considered “low-risk” and 35 “high-risk” patients. Groups that showed a significant increased risk for OA were patients aged > 40 years, females, overweight (BMI >25 kg/m2 ≤ 30 kg/m2), and smokers (*p < 0.05). The “high-risk”-follow-up revealed a progression of early osteoarthritic cartilage changes in seven patients, with the remaining nineteen patients showing no changes in cartilage status or pain since time of operation. Additionally, eighteen patients in the high-risk group showed a varus or valgus axis deviation. Patient-specific factors for worse postoperative outcomes after partial meniscectomy and indicators for an “early OA” development were identified, providing the basis for a patient-specific treatment approach. Further analysis in a multicentre study and computational analysis of MRI scans is ongoing to develop a patient-specific treatment algorithm for meniscectomy patients


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 3 - 3
2 Jan 2024
Sohn R Assar T Braun S Brenneis M Kaufhold I Zaucke F Pongratz G Jenei-Lanzl Z
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Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common degenerative joint disorder. Its multifactorial etiology includes age, sex, joint overloading, genetic or nervous influences. In particular, the autonomic nervous system is increasingly gaining in importance. Its two branches, the sympathetic (SNS) and parasympathetic nervous system, are well-balanced under healthy conditions. OA patients seem to be prone to an autonomic imbalance and therefore, we analyzed their autonomic status. More than 200 participants including patients with early and late stage knee OA (before and 1 year after knee replacement surgery) and healthy probands (age-matched) were analyzed. Heart rate variability was measured via electrocardiogram to assess long-term sympathetic (low-frequency=LF) and parasympathetic (high-frequency=HF, pRR50) activities or general variability (RMSSD, SDRR). Serum cortisol concentrations were measured by ELISA. Perceived chronic stress (PSQ) was assessed via questionnaire. Multivariant regression was performed for data analysis. LF/HF value of early OA was slightly increased compared to healthy controls but significantly higher compared to late OA patients before (p>0.05) and after TKR (p>0.01). HF in late OA patients before TKR was significantly decreased compared to patients after TKR (p>0.001) or healthy controls (p>0.05). Healthy probands exhibited the highest SDRR values, early OA patients had slightly lower levels and late OA patients before TKR displayed significantly reduced SDRR (p>0.001). The same differences were observed in pRR50 and RMSSD. Serum cortisol concentrations and PSQ scores increased in late OA patients before TKR. At the time point of TKR, women with beta blocker medication had significantly higher age (71 ± 9 years) than those without (63 ± 12 years)(p>0.01). An autonomic dysfunction with sympathetic dominance occurs in OA patients. The fact that beta blocker medication in women delayed the need of TKR indicates that SNS inhibition might counteract OA. Future therapeutic interventions for OA should consider a systemic approach with special regard on the ANS


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 111 - 111
1 Nov 2021
Mulder F Senden R Staal H de Bot R van Douveren F Tolk J Meijer K Witlox A
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Introduction and Objective. Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis (SCFE) is one of the most common hip disorders in children and is characterized by a proximal femoral deformity, resulting in early osteoarthritis. Several studies have suggested that SCFE patients after in situ fixation show an altered gait pattern. Early identification of gait alterations might lead to earlier intervention programs to prevent osteoarthritis. The aim of this study is to analyse gait alterations in SCFE patients after in situ fixation compared to typically developed children, using the Computer Assisted Rehabilitation Environment (CAREN) system. Materials and Methods. This is a cross-sectional, multi-center case-control study in the Netherlands. Eight SCFE patients and eight age- and sex-matched typically developed were included from two hospitals. Primary outcomes were kinematic parameters (absolute joint angles), studied with gait analysis using statistical parametric mapping (SPM). Secondary outcomes were spatiotemporal parameters, the Notzli alpha angle, muscle activation patterns (EMG), and clinical questionnaires (VAS, Borg CR10, SF-36, and HOOS), analyzed using non-parametric statistical methods. Results. Patients (mean BMI=28±9 kg/m. 2. ) showed altered gait patterns, with significantly increased external hip rotation and decreased downward pelvic obliquity during the pre-swing phase of the gait cycle compared to typically developed (mean BMI=22±3 kg/m. 2. ). Walking speed, cadence, % stance time, and step length were reduced in SCFE patients. Coefficient of variances of cadence, stance time, and step length were increased. Patients had a mean alpha angle of 64, SD=7.9. Clinical questionnaires showed that general health (SF-36) was 80±25, energy/fatigue (SF-36) was 67±15, pain (VAS) was 0±1.5, and total HOOS score was 85±18. Conclusions. SCFE patients after in situ fixation appear to have developed a compensation mechanism, showing slight alterations in gait parameters, good general health, little functional limitations of the hip, and no self-reported pain. Cam deformities, altered joint loading, and this compensation mechanism might influence long-term early osteoarthritis. BMI reduction should be implemented in care plans, as obesity might also play a role in unfavorable long-term outcomes


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Matrix metalloproteinase enzymes (MMPs) play a crucial role in the remodeling of articular cartilage, contributing also to osteoarthritis (OA) progression. The pericellular matrix (PCM) is a specialized space surrounding each chondrocyte, containing collagen type VI and perlecan. It acts as a transducer of biomechanical and biochemical signals for the chondrocyte. This study investigates the impact of MMP-2, -3, and -7 on the integrity and biomechanical characteristics of the PCM. Human articular cartilage explants (n=10 patients, ethical-nr.:674/2016BO2) were incubated with activated MMP-2, -3, or -7 as well as combinations of these enzymes. The structural degradative effect on the PCM was assessed by immunolabelling of the PCM's main components: collagen type VI and perlecan. Biomechanical properties of the PCM in form of the elastic moduli (EM) were determined by means of atomic force microscopy (AFM), using a spherical cantilever tip (2.5µm). MMPs disrupted the PCM-integrity, resulting in altered collagen type VI and perlecan structure and dispersed pericellular arrangement. A total of 3600 AFM-measurements revealed that incubation with single MMPs resulted in decreased PCM stiffness (p<0.001) when compared to the untreated group. The overall EM were reduced by ∼36% for all the 3 individual enzymes. The enzyme combinations altered the biomechanical properties at a comparable level (∼36%, p<0.001), except for MMP-2/-7 (p=0.202). MMP-induced changes in the PCM composition have a significant impact on the biomechanical properties of the PCM, similar to those observed in early OA. Each individual MMP was shown to be highly capable of selectively degrading the PCM microenvironment. The combination of MMP-2 and -7 showed a lower potency in reducing the PCM stiffness, suggesting a possible interplay between the two enzymes. Our study showed that MMP-2, -3, and -7 play a direct role in the functional and structural remodeling of the PCM. Acknowledgements: This work was supported by the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Tübingen (grant number.: 2650-0-0)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 78 - 78
17 Apr 2023
Luczak A Battle I Amin A Hall A
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The development of cytoplasmic processes from in situ chondrocytes is a characteristic feature of early osteoarthritis in human cartilage. The processes involve cytoskeletal elements and are distinct from the short primary cilia described in human chondrocytes. Vimentin is an intermediate filament playing an essential structural and signal-transduction role. We determined cellular levels and distribution of vimentin in chondrocytes of different morphologies in non-degenerate and mildly osteoarthritic cartilage. Femoral heads were obtained after consent from patients undergoing hip arthroplasty following femoral neck fracture. Cartilage explants were graded as non-degenerate (grade 0;G0) or mildly osteoarthritic (grade 1;G1) and labelled with the cytoplasmic dye CMFDA (5-chloromethylfluorescein-diacetate) for cell shape. Explants were cryosectioned and labelled for vimentin by fluorescence immunohistochemistry. In situ chondrocyte morphology was identified by confocal microscopy as either normal (rounded/elliptical) or abnormal (with one or more cytoplasmic process of ≥2µm) and vimentin levels and distribution determined semi-quantitatively and related to chondrocyte morphology. When all cells in G0 and G1 cartilage were compared, there was no difference between average levels of vimentin per cell (P=0.144)[6(261)];femoral heads:cells). When cells were separated on the basis of morphology, there was no difference between vimentin levels in cells with one or more cytoplasmic process compared to those of normal morphology (P>0.05;[6(261)]). However vimentin levels were much greater at the base of cytoplasmic processes compared to distant areas of the same cells (P=0.021)[5(29)]). Although overall levels of chondrocyte vimentin do not change in these early stages of osteoarthritis, the formation and structure of these substantial chondrocyte cytoplasmic processes involves changes to its distribution. These morphological changes are similar to those occurring during chondrocyte de-differentiation to fibroblasts reported in osteoarthritis which results in the formation of mechanically-inferior fibro-cartilage. Alterations to chondrocyte vimentin distribution either directly or indirectly may play a role in cartilage degeneration


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 81 - 81
17 Apr 2023
Rambacher K Gennrich J Schewior R Lang S Pattappa G Zihlmann C Stiefel N Zellner J Docheva D Angele P
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Meniscus tears have been treated using partial meniscectomy to relieve pain in patients, although this leads to the onset of early osteoarthritis (OA). Cell-based therapies can help preserve the meniscus, although the presence of inflammatory cytokines compromises clinical outcomes. Anti-inflammatory drugs (e.g. celecoxib), can help to reduce pain in patients and in vitro studies suggest a beneficial effect on cytokine inhibited matrix content. Previously, we have demonstrated that the inhibitory effects of IL-1β can be countered by culture under low oxygen tension or physioxia. The present study sought to understand whether physioxia, celecoxib or combined application can counter the inhibitory effects IL-1β inhibited meniscus cells. Human avascular and vascular meniscus cells (n =3) were isolated and expanded under 20% (hyperoxia) or 2% (physioxia) oxygen. Cells were seeded into collagen scaffolds (Geistlich, Wolhusen) and cultured for 28 days either in the presence of 0.1ng/mL IL-1β, 5µg/mL celecoxib or both under their expansion oxygen conditions. Histological (DMMB, collagen I and collagen II immunostaining), GAG content and gene expression analysis was evaluated for the scaffolds. Under hyperoxia, meniscus cells showed a significant reduction in GAG content in the presence of IL-1β (*p < 0.05). Celecoxib alone did not significantly increase GAG content in IL-1β treated cultures. In contrast, physioxic culture showed a donor dependent increase in GAG content in control, IL-1β and celecoxib treated cultures with corresponding histological staining correlating with these results. Additionally, gene expression showed an upregulation in COL1A1, COL2A1 and ACAN and a downregulation in MMP13 and ADAMTS5 under physioxia for all experimental groups. Physioxia alone had a stronger effect in countering the inhibitory effects of IL-1β treated meniscus cells than celecoxib under hyperoxia. Preconditioning meniscus cells under physioxia prior to implantation has the potential to improve clinical outcomes for cell-based therapies of the meniscus


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 119 - 119
11 Apr 2023
Peffers M Anderson J Jacobsen S Walters M Bundgaard L Hackle M James V
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Joint tissues release extracellular vesicles (EVs) that potentially sustain joint homeostasis and contribute to osteoarthritis (OA) pathogenesis. EVs are putative novel therapeutics for OA, and transport biologically active molecules (including small non-coding RNAs (SNCRNAs)) between cells. This study identified altering SNCRNA cargo in EVs in OA which may act as early diagnostic markers and treatment targets. OA was surgically induced in four skeletally mature Standardbred horses using an osteochondral fragment model in the left middle carpal joint. The right joint underwent sham surgery. Synovial fluid (SF) and plasma were obtained weekly throughout the 70-day study. EVs were isolated using size exclusion chromatography and characterised using nanoparticle tracking (Nanosight), and exosome fluorescence detection and tetraspanin phenotyping (Exoview). RNA was extracted from EVs derived from SF (sham and OA joints) and plasma collected at days 10, 35, 42, 49, 56, 63, and subjected to small RNA sequencing on a NovaSeq SP100 flow cell (Illumina). Nanosight-derived EV characteristics of size and concentration were not significantly different following disease induction. The diameter of the temporal population of plasma and SF-derived exosomes changed significantly for CD9 and CD81 following OA induction with significant temporal, and disease-related changes in CD63 and CD81 protein expressin in plasma and SF. In SF and plasma-derived EVs snoRNAs, snRNAs, tRNAs, lncRNA, y-RNA, piRNAs and scRNA were found. Following pairwise analysis of all-time points we identified 27 miRs DE in plasma and 45 DE miRs in SF. Seven were DE in plasma and SF; miR-451, miR-25, miR-215, miR-92a, miR-let-7c, miR-486-5p, miR-23a. In plasma and SF 35 and 21 snoRNAs were DE with four DE in plasma and SF; U3, snord15, snord46, snord58. This work has identified alterations to OA EV sncRNAs in plasma and SF providing a greater understanding of the role of EVs in early OA


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 328 - 328
1 Jul 2014
Hargrave-Thomas E Thambyah A McGlashan S Broom N
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Summary. Macroscopic grading, histologic grading, morphometry, mineral analysis, and mechanical testing were performed to better understand the changes that occur in the cartilage, calcified cartilage, and subchondral bone in early osteoarthritis. Introduction. The earliest changes in osteoarthritis (OA) remain poorly understood due to the difficulty in detecting OA before patients feel pain. We have published details of the mature bovine patella model showing the pre-OA state where no gross macroscopic changes are visible yet microstructural changes indicate very early degeneration. In this new study, we proceed to investigate this model further by more comprehensively quantifying the changes in articular cartilage (AC), zone of calcified cartilage (ZCC), and subchondral bone (SB) in pre and early OA. Methods. Patellae from mature cow were studied. Gross examination with India ink was used to classify macroscopic cartilage degeneration. Two groups were selected in this study: one with no visible surface degeneration (pre-OA) and the other with mild to moderate macroscopically visible surface degeneration (early OA). Histologic staining with Safranin O and Fast Green was analysed with two osteoarthritic scoring systems: Mankin and OOCHAS. Differential Interference Contrast (DIC) microscopy was used to quantify morphometric changes. Degree of mineralisation was analysed with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) to quantify the calcium and phosphorus content of the mineralised tissues. Material properties of calcified cartilage and subchondral bone were tested macroscopically using 3 point bending. Results. In the early OA group, cartilage was fissured and showed matrix loss. In its hydrated state, average cartilage thickness was significantly greater (p<0.05) in the early OA group by 24% compared to pre-OA group. The early OA group showed an 88% increase in ZCC thickness. Early OA tissue was graded significantly higher in OOCHAS grading and structure scores, cellularity, and staining scores of Mankin grading but not in the tidemark integrity score. Pre-OA and early OA tissues showed no significant differences in ZCC or SB mineralisation although all samples showed an increase in the degree of mineralisation going from the upper to the deeper ZCC and SB. Macroscopic mechanical testing showed no significant differences in mechanical properties between pre-OA and early OA groups. However within groups, the ZCC was an order of magnitude less stiff than the SB. Micromechanical testing showed that deeper ZCC and SB were stiffer than their regions closer to the joint surface. Conclusions. Early osteoarthritic changes in the joint tissues produce macro-level cartilage degeneration as well as microstructural changes. The combination of mineralisation and mechanical data show that though calcified cartilage and subchondral bone have similar mineralisation profiles, their material properties are drastically different, suggesting that stiffness is not purely the result of the mineral phase


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 53 - 53
17 Nov 2023
Wright K McDonald J Mennan C Perry J Peffers M Hulme C
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Abstract. Objectives. A promising therapy for early osteoarthritis (OA) is the transplantation of human umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (hUC-MSCs). The synovial fluid (SF) from a pre-clinical ovine model treated with hUC-MSCs has been profiled using proteomics and bioinformatics to elucidate potential mechanisms of therapeutic effect. Methods. Four weeks after a medial meniscus transection surgery, sheep were injected with 10. 7. hUC-MSCs in Phosphate Buffered Saline (PBS) or PBS only (n=7) and sacrificed at 12 weeks. SF was normalised for protein abundance (ProteoMiner. TM. ) and analysed using label-free quantitation proteomics. Bioinformatics analyses (Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) and STRING) were used to assess differentially regulated functions from the proteomic data. Human orthologues were identified for the ovine proteins using UniProt and DAVID resources and proteins that were ≥±1.3 fold differentially abundant between treatment groups, were included in the bioinformatics analyses. Results. hUC-MSC treated animals demonstrated significantly less joint space narrowing. Nineteen SF proteins were differentially abundant in treated cf. control sheep (FC±2.0; p<0.05). Biglycan (a small leucine-rich proteoglycan of the cartilage extracellular matrix) abundance was increased by 2.1 fold in treated compared to untreated sheep (p=0.024). IPA indicated that lipid synthesis (z-score=1.772; p=0.00267) and immune cell migration pathways (cell movement of mononuclear leukocytes: z-score=1.761; p=0.00259), amongst others, were likely to be activated in the treated sheep. Conversely, tissue damage (z-score=−2; p=0.00019), senescence (z-score=−1.981; p=0.00007) and necrosis (z-score=−1.728; p=0.00829) associated pathways as well as inflammation (z-score=−1.718; p=0.00057) and vascular permeability (z-score=−1.698; p=0.00002) were likely to be inhibited in treated cf. untreated sheep. Conclusions. hUC-MSC treatment prevented/delayed OA progression, demonstrated via a reduction in joint space narrowing. SF proteome bioinformatics revealed potential mechanisms of therapeutic action related to immunomodulation and the inhibition of multiple cell death, and tissue damage associated pathways. Further, a potential predicted upregulation in lipid synthesis in treated sheep represents a novel mechanism warranting further investigation. Additional work is required to validate these discovery phase proteomic findings in studies which specifically target and manipulate the proposed mechanisms highlighted. 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. 102-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 105 - 105
1 Dec 2020
Marchiori G Berni M Veronesi F Cassiolas G Muttini A Barboni B Martini L Fini M Lopomo NF Marcacci M Kon E
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No therapeutic strategy, administered in the early stage of osteoarthritis (OA), is fully able to block the degenerative and inflammatory progress of the pathology, whose only solution remains surgery. Aiming to identify minimally invasive therapies able to act on both degenerative and inflammatory processes, infiltrative treatments based on mesenchymal stem cells represent a promising solution due to their proliferative, immunomodulatory, anti-inflammatory, and paracrine ability. Accordingly, the aim of the present study was to investigate the performance of different cell therapies (stem cells from adipose tissue, ADSCs, stromal vascular fraction, SVF, and culture expanded, AECs vs negative control NaCl) in the treatment of OA. An in vivo model of early OA was developed in sheep knee (research protocol N.62/2018-PR date 29/01/2018 approved by the local Ethical Committee). Three and six months after the treatments injections, gross evaluation of articular surfaces (damage score, DS), histological (cartilage thickness, Th; fibrillation index, FI; collagen II content, C2) and mechanical assessment (elastic modulus, E; stress-relaxation time, τ) of cartilage were carried out. Due to the importance of the relationship between structure/composition (histology) and function (mechanics), this study investigated which of the revealed parameters were involved in such relation and how they were influenced by the level of degeneration and by the specific cell treatment, thus to better understand cell-tissue interaction. A statistically significant multi-variable linear regression model was found between τ and Th, FI, C2 (R2 0.7, p-value 8.39E-5). The relation was particularly strong between τ and C2 (p-value 7E-4), with a positive coefficient of 0.92. This is in agreement with literature, where a higher cartilage viscosity was related to a major content of collagen. By dividing the samples in two groups depending on cartilage damage, the more degenerated group (DS > 5) showed statistically significant lower C2 (p-value 0.0124) and τ (p-value 0.05), confirming that collagen content and viscosity decrease with OA grade increasing. Averaging the entire group of samples, the OA degeneration progressed between 3 and 6 months after, and despite, the treatment. But focusing on specific treatments, SVF and AECs differed from the general trend, inducing a higher amount of collagen at 6 months respect to 3 months. Moreover, articular cartilage treated by AECs and, overall, SVF showed a higher content of collagen and a major viscosity respect to the other treatments. We conclude that an injection of mesenchymal stem cells from stromal vascular fraction in early OA articulations could hinder the degenerative process, preserving or even restoring collagen content and viscosity of the articular cartilage


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 9 - 9
1 Dec 2022
Olivotto E Mariotti F Castagnini F Favero M Oliviero F Evangelista A Ramonda R Grigolo B Tassinari E Traina F
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Hip Osteoarthritis (HOA) is the most common joint disorder and a major cause of disability in the adult population, leading to total hip replacement (THR). Recently, evidence has mounted for a prominent etiologic role of femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) in the development of early OA in the non-dysplastic hip. FAI is a pathological mechanical process, caused by abnormalities of the acetabulum and/or femur leading to damage the soft tissue structures. FAI can determine chondro-labral damage and groin pain in young adults and can accelerate HOA progression in middle-aged adults. The aim of the study was to determine if the presence of calcium crystal in synovial fluid (SF) at the time of FAI surgery affects the clinical outcomes to be used as diagnostic and predictive biomarker. 49 patients with FAI undergoing arthroscopy were enrolled after providing informed consent; 37 SFs were collected by arthrocentesis at the time of surgery and 35 analyzed (66% males), median age 35 years with standard deviation (SD) 9.7 and body mass index (BMI) 23.4 kg/m. 2. ; e SD 3. At the time of surgery, chondral pathology using the Outerbridge score, labral pathology and macroscopic synovial pathology based on direct arthroscopic visualization were evaluated. Physical examination and clinical assessment using the Hip disability & Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS) were performed at the time of surgery and at 6 months of follow up. As positive controls of OA signs, SF samples were also collected from cohort of 15 patients with HOA undergoing THR and 12 were analysed. 45% FAI patients showed CAM deformity; 88% presented labral lesion or instability and 68% radiographic labral calcification. 4 patients out of 35 showed moderate radiographic signs of OA (Kellegren-Lawrence score = 3). Pre-operative HOOS median value was 61.3% (68.10-40.03) with interquartile range (IQR) of 75-25% and post-operative HOOS median value 90% with IQR 93.8-80.60. In both FAI and OA patients the calcium crystal level in SFs negatively correlated with glycosaminoglycan (component of the extracellular matrix) released, which is a marker of cartilage damage (Spearman rho=-0.601, p<0.001). In FAI patients a worst articular function after surgery, measured with the HOOS questionnaire, was associated with both acetabular and femoral chondropathy and degenerative labral lesion. Moreover, radiographic labral calcification was also significantly associated with pain, worst articular function and labral lesion. Calcium crystal level in SFs was associated with labral lesions and OA signs. We concluded that the levels of calcium crystals in FAI patients are correlated with joint damage, OA signs and worst post-operative outcome. The presence of calcium crystals in SF of FAI patients might be a potential new biomarker that might help clinicians to make an early diagnosis, evaluate disease progression and monitor treatment response


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 47 - 47
17 Nov 2023
Algarni M Amin A Hall A
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Abstract. Objectives. Osteoarthritis (OA) is a painful and debilitating disorder of diarthroidal joints. Progressive degeneration of the cartilage extracellular matrix (ECM) together with abnormal chondrocyte characteristics occur leading to a switch to a fibroblast-like phenotype and production of mechanically-weak cartilage. Early changes to chondrocytes within human cartilage have been observed including chondrocyte swelling. [1]. together with the development of thin cytoplasmic processes which increase in number and length with degeneration. [2]. Changes to chondrocyte phenotype in degenerate cartilage are associated with F-actin redistribution and stress fibres (SF) formation, leading to morphologically-dedifferentiated (fibroblast-like) chondrocytes. [3,4]. It is unclear if these processes are a consequence of ‘passive’ cell swelling into a defective ECM or an ‘active’ event driven by changes in cell metabolism resulting in alterations to cell shape. To address this, we have quantified and compared the distribution and levels of F-actin, a key cytoskeletal protein involved in the formation of cytoplasmic processes, within in situ chondrocytes in non-degenerate and mildly degenerate human cartilage. Methods. Human femoral head cartilage was obtained from 21 patients [15 females, 6 males, average age 69.6yrs, (range 47–90yrs)] following femoral neck fracture, with Ethical Approval and patient's permission. Cartilage explants were removed from areas graded non-degenerate grade 0 (G0) or mildly degenerate grade 1 (G1) and cultured for up to 3wks in Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's Medium (DMEM) +/− 25% human serum (HS). In situ chondrocytes were stained with CMFDA (5-chloromethylfluoresceindiacetate, Cell-Tracker Green®) and phalloidin (F-actin labelling) and imaged by confocal microscopy and analysed quantitatively using ImageJ and Imaris® software. Results. There were significant increases in the total amount (TA) of F-actin and its distribution [intense punctuate (IP) and intense areas (IA)] between the whole chondrocyte populations of G0 and G1 cartilage (P=0.0356; 0.0112; 0.016, respectively). Where the volume of chondrocytes was divided into normal (<1000 µm³) and swollen (≥1000 µm³) cells, F-actin TA increased in swollen cells (P=0.036 within G0 and G1, and P=0.0009 between grades) compared to chondrocytes of normal volume in each grade. Moreover, IP and IA within and between G0 and G1 were higher compared to normal chondrocytes (with P<0.0001 for IP and P<0.001 for IA). In addition, tissue culture experiments demonstrated that 90% of chondrocytes with cytoplasmic processes had strong F-actin intensity (either IP or IA with P<0.0001). Furthermore, 83% of this F-actin was associated with cytoplasmic processes, with >65% situated at the base of the process (P<0.0001). Conclusions. The increases in chondrocyte F-actin levels (TA) and its localisation (IP, IA) appear to be associated with cell swelling and development of cytoplasmic processes, which are both characteristics of early OA cartilage. [1]. This suggests the formation of chondrocyte cytoplasmic processes is an ‘active’ event potentially involving changes to matrix metabolism rather than a ‘passive’ cell swelling into a defective extracellular matrix. 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_16 | Pages 56 - 56
17 Nov 2023
Algarni M Amin A Hall A
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Abstract. Objectives. Osteoarthritis (OA) is a complex joint disorder characterised by the loss of extracellular matrix (ECM) leading to cartilage degeneration. Changes to cartilage cell (chondrocyte) behaviour occur including cell swelling, the development of fine cytoplasmic processes and cell clustering leading to changes in cell phenotype and development of focal areas of mechanically-weak fibrocartilaginous matrix. [1]. To study the sequence of events in more detail, we have investigated the changes to in situ chondrocytes within human cartilage which has been lightly scraped and then cultured with serum. Methods. Human femoral heads were obtained with Ethical permission and consent from four female patients (mean age 74 yrs) undergoing hip arthroplasty following femoral neck fracture. Osteochondral explants of macroscopically-normal cartilage were cultured as a non-scraped control, or scraped gently six times with a scalpel blade and both maintained in culture for up to 2wks in Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's Medium (DMEM) with 25% human serum (HS). Explants were then labelled with CMFDA (5-chloromethylfluorescein-diacetate) and PI (propidium iodide) (10μM each) to identify the morphology of living or dead chondrocytes respectively. Explants were imaged using confocal microscopy and in situ chondrocyte morphology, volume and clustering assessed quantitatively within standardised regions of interest (ROI) using Imaris. ®. imaging software. Results. Within 2wks of culture with HS, chondrocyte volume increased significantly from 412±9.3µm. 3. (unscraped) at day 0 to 724±16.6 µm. 3. (scraped) [N(n) = 4(380)] (P=0.0002). Chondrocyte clustering was a prominent feature of HS culture as the percentage of clusters in the cell population increased with scraping from 4.8±1.4% to 14.9±3.9% [N(n) = 4(999)] at week 2 (P=0.0116). In addition, the % of the chondrocyte population within clusters increased from approximately 38% to 60%, and the number of cells per cluster increased significantly from 3.2±0.08 to 4±0.22 (P=0.031). The development of abnormal ‘fibroblastic-like’ chondrocyte morphology demonstrating long (>5µm) cytoplasmic processes also occurred, however the time course of this was more variable. For some samples, clustering occurred before abnormal morphology, but for others the opposite occurred. Typically, by the second week, 17±2.64% of the cell population had processes and this increased to 22±4.02% [N(n) = 4(759)] with scraping. Conclusions. Scraping the cartilage will remove surface constituents including lubricants (e.g. lubricin, hyaluronic acid, phospholipids), extracellular matrix constituents (collagen, proteoglycans – potentially the ‘lamina splendens’) and cells (chondrocytes and mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs)). Although we do not know which of these component(s) is important, the effect is to dramatically increase the permeation of serum factors into the cartilage matrix and signal the development of cytoplasmic processes, cell clustering and swelling. It is notable that these cellular changes are similar to those occurring in early OA. [1]. This raises the interesting possibility that scraped cartilage cultured with human serum recapitulates some of the changes to in situ chondrocytes during early stages of cartilage degeneration and as such, could be a useful model for following the deleterious changes to matrix metabolism. 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