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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 123 - 123
1 May 2016
Walsh W Bertollo N Schaffner D Christou C Oliver R Hale D
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Introduction

Bone marrow stimulation has been a successful treatment option in cartilage repair and microfracture was the procedure of choice since the late 1980s. Despite its success in young and active patients, microfracture has inherent shortcomings such as shallow channels, wall compression, and non-standardized depth and diameter. This in vitro study assessed bone marrow access comparing microfracture, 1 and 2mm K-Wires, 1mm drill, and a recently introduced standardized subchondral bone needling procedure (Nanofracture) that creates 9mm deep and 1mm wide channels.

Methods

An adult ovine model was used to assess access to bone the marrow spaces as well as effects on bone following microfracture, nanofracture, K-wire, and drilling following ethical clearance. All bone marrow stimulation techniques were conducted on a full thickness articular cartilage defect on the medial femoral condyles by the same surgeon. The same groups were repeated in vitro in 4 paired ovine distal femurs. MicroCT (Inveon Scanner, Siemens, Germany) was performed using 3D reconstruction and 25 micron slice analysis (MIMICS, Materialise, Belgium).