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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 35 - 35
1 Mar 2013
Elnikety S Pendegrass C Alexander S Blunn G
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Repair of tendon injuries aims to restore length, mechanical strength and function. We hypothesise that Demineralised Cortical Bone (DCB) present in biological tendon environment will result in remodelling of the DCB into ligament tissue. A cadaveric study was carried out to optimize the technique. The distal 1cm of the patellar tendon was excised and DCB was used to bridge the defect. 4 models were examined, Model-1: one anchor, Model-2: 2 anchors, Model-3: 2 anchors with double looped off-loading thread, Model-4: 2 anchors with 3 threads off-loading loop. 6 mature sheep undergone surgical resection of the distal 1cm of the right patellar tendon. Repair was done using DCB with 2 anchors. Immediate mobilisation was allowed, animals were sacrificed at 12 weeks. Force plate assessments were done at weeks 3, 6, 9 and 12. Radiographs were taken and pQCT scan was done prior to histological analysis. In the cadaveric study, the median failure force for the 4 models; 250N, 290N, 767N and 934N respectively. In the animal study, none of the specimens showed evidence of ossification of the DCB. One animal failed to show satisfactory progress, X-rays showed patella alta, on specimen retrieval there was no damage to the DCB and sutures and no evidence of anchor pullout. Functional weight bearing was 79% at week12. Histological analysis proved remodelling of the collagen leading to ligamentisation of the DCB. Results prove that DCB can be used as biological tendon substitute, combined with the use of suture bone anchor early mobilisation can be achieved


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 158 - 158
1 Jul 2014
Elnikety S Pendegrass C Holden C Blunn G
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Summary. Our results prove that Demineralised Cortical Bone (DCB) can be used as biological tendon graft substitute, combined with correct surgical technique and the use of suture bone anchor early mobilisation can be achieved. Introduction. Surgical repair of tendon injuries aims to restore length, mechanical strength and function. In severe injuries with loss of tendon substance a tendon graft or a substitute is usually used to restore functional length. This is usually associated with donor site morbidity, host tissue reactions and lack of remodelling of the synthetic substitutes which may result in suboptimal outcome. In this study we hypothesise that DCB present in biological tendon environment with early mobilisation and appropriate tension will result in remodelling of the DCB into ligament tissue rather that ossification of the DCB at traditional expected. Our preparatory cadaveric study (abstract submitted to CORS 2013) showed that the repair model used in this animal study has sufficient mechanical strength needed for this animal study. Methods. 6 mature female sheep undergone surgical resection of the distal 1 cm of the right patellar tendon and osteotomy of patellar tendon attachment at the tibial tuberosity under general anaesthesia. Repair was done using DCB with 2 suture bone anchor. Animals were allowed immediate mobilisation after surgery and were sacrificed at 12 weeks. The force passing through the operated and non-operated legs was assessed preoperatively and at week 3, week 6, week 9 and week 12 bay walking the animals over a force plate. Radiographs were taken immediately after euthanasia, the Patella-Tendon-tibia constructs were retrieved and pQCT scan was done. Histological analysis included tenocytes and chondrocytes cell counts, semi-quantitative scoring of the neo-enthesis and polarised microscopy. Result. In this study, none of the retrieved specimens showed any evidence of ossification of the DCB as proved by the pQCT analysis. One animal failed to show satisfactory progress after week 3, X-rays showed patella alta, on specimen retrieval no damage to the DCB was found, sutures and stitches were intact and no evidence of anchor pullout was found. Force plate analysis of the other 5 animals showed satisfactory progression over time with 44% functional weight bearing at week 3 progressing to 79% at week 12. There was full range of movement of the stifle joint after 12 weeks. Histological analysis proved formation of neo-enthesis with evidence of cellulisation, vascularisation and remodelling of the collagen leading to ligamentisation of the DCB. Discussion. Surgical reconstruction of damaged tendons is technically challenging, patellar tendon injuries presents even more challenging situation as it involves weight bearing joint. It is generally accepted that a period of immobilisation with passive range of movement exercises and protected weight bearing for up to 6 weeks post operatively is usually advised. Some surgeons use offloading metal wire to protect the repair for 6 weeks involving second surgical procedure to remove the wire. Demineralised bone is usually used in orthopaedics to utilise its osteogenic properties as bone graft substitute and to enhance osteogenesis in load bearing situations. In our study we explored a potential new use of the demineralised bone as tendon graft substitute, it acts as collagen scaffold allowing host cells to remodel its fibres into ligament like structure


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 5 | Pages 688 - 691
1 May 2006
van Huyssteen AL Hendrix MRG Barnett AJ Wakeley CJ Eldridge JDJ

Trochlear dysplasia is an important anatomical abnormality in symptomatic patellar instability. Our study assessed the mismatch between the bony and cartilaginous morphology in patients with a dysplastic trochlea compared with a control group.

MRI scans of 25 knees in 23 patients with trochlear dysplasia and in 11 patients in a randomly selected control group were reviewed retrospectively in order to assess the morphology of the cartilaginous and bony trochlea. Inter- and intra-observer error was assessed.

In the dysplastic group there were 15 women and eight men with a mean age of 20.4 years (14 to 30). The mean bony sulcus angle was 167.9° (141° to 203°), whereas the mean cartilaginous sulcus angle was 186.5° (152° to 214°; p < 0.001). In 74 of 75 axial images (98.7%) the cartilaginous contour was different from the osseous contour on subjective assessment, the cartilage exacerbated the abnormality.

Our study shows that the morphology of the cartilaginous trochlea differs markedly from that of the underlying bony trochlea in patients with trochlear dysplasia. MRI is necessary in order to demonstrate the pathology and to facilitate surgical planning.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 6 | Pages 873 - 878
1 Jun 2005
Oddy MJ Pendegrass CJ Goodship AE Cannon SR Briggs TWR Blunn GW

We developed an in vivo model of the attachment of a patellar tendon to a metal implant to simulate the reconstruction of an extensor mechanism after replacement of the proximal tibia. In 24 ewes, the patellar tendon was attached to a hydroxyapatite (HA)-coated titanium prosthesis. In 12, the interface was augmented with autograft containing cancellous bone and marrow. In the remaining ewes, the interface was not grafted.

Kinematic gait analysis showed nearly normal function of the joint by 12 weeks. Force-plate assessment showed a significant increase in functional weight-bearing in the grafted animals (p = 0.043). The tendon-implant interface showed that without graft, encapsulation of fibrous tissue occurred. With autograft, a developing tendon-bone-HA-implant interface was observed at six weeks and by 12 weeks a layered tendon-fibrocartilage-bone interface was seen which was similar to a direct-type enthesis.

With stable mechanical fixation, an appropriate bioactive surface and biological augmentation the development of a functional tendon-implant interface can be achieved.