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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 96 - 96
2 Jan 2024
Bauer C Moser L Otahal A Kern D Dammerer D Zantop T Nehrer S
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Mincing cartilage with commercially available shavers is increasingly used for treating focal cartilage defects. This study aimed to compare the impact of mincing bovine articular cartilage using different shaver blades on chondrocyte viability.

Bovine articular cartilage was harvested using a scalpel or three different shaver blades (2.5 mm, 3.5 mm, or 4.2 mm) from a commercially available shaver. The cartilage obtained with a scalpel was minced into fragments smaller than 1 mm3. All four conditions were cultivated in a culture medium for seven days. After Day 1 and Day 7, metabolic activity, RNA isolation, and gene expression of anabolic (COL2A1, ACAN) and catabolic genes (MMP1, MMP13), Live/Dead staining and visualization using confocal microscopy, and flow cytometric characterization of minced cartilage chondrocytes were measured.

The study found that mincing cartilage with shavers significantly reduced metabolic activity after one and seven days compared to scalpel mincing (p<0.001). Gene expression of anabolic genes was reduced, while catabolic genes were increased after day 7 in all shaver conditions. The MMP13/COL2A1 ratio was also increased in all shaver conditions. Confocal microscopy revealed a thin line of dead cells at the lesion site with viable cells below for the scalpel mincing and a higher number of dead cells diffusely distributed in the shaver conditions. After seven days, there was a significant decrease in viable cells in the shaver conditions compared to scalpel mincing (p<0.05). Flow cytometric characterization revealed fewer intact cells and proportionally more dead cells in all shaver conditions compared to the scalpel mincing.

Mincing bovine articular cartilage with commercially available shavers reduces the viability of chondrocytes compared to scalpel mincing. This indicates that mincing cartilage with a shaver should be considered a matrix rather than a cell therapy. Further experimental and clinical studies are required to standardize the mincing process with a shaver.

Acknowledgements: This study received unrestricted funding from KARL STORZ SE & Co. KG.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XLIV | Pages 95 - 95
1 Oct 2012
Hofbauer V Bittrich T Glasbrenner J Schulze M Burger M Zantop T Rosenbaum D Ruebberdt A Raschke M
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The medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL) has been recognised as the most important medial structure preventing lateral dislocation or subluxation of the patella (LeGrand 2007). After MPFL rupture the patella deviates from the optimal path resulting in an altered retropatellar pressure distribution. This may lead to an early degeneration with loss of function and need for endoprosthetic joint replacement. The goal of this study was to develop a dynamic knee-simulator to test the influence of ligament instabilities to patella-tracking under simulation of physiological quadriceps muscle loading.

On 10 fresh-frozen cadaveric knees the quadriceps muscle was divided into five parts along their anatomic fibre orientation analogous to Farahmand 1998. The muscular loading was achieved by applying weights to each of the fife components in proportion to the cross sectional muscle area. A total of 175 N was connected to the muscles using modified industrial cable connecting systems [Lancier Calbe, Drensteinfurt/Germany].

A novel light digital patellar reference base (DRB) was developed and attached to the patella with four bone screws. On addition a femoral and tibial digital reference base was constructed and secured to these two bones.

Position data of the patella, the femur and tibia was tracked by a conventional tracking system [Optotrak, NDI Europe]. The relative movement between femur and tibia (“flexion path”) and patella and femur (“patella tracking”) was recorded. For retropatellar pressure measurement a custom made sensor was introduced between the patella and femur [Pliance, Novel/Germany]. The sensor consists of 85 single pressure measuring cells. The robot-control-unit is liked to a force-torque sensor (hybrid method). The force free knee-flexion-path from 0° to 90° was calculated during three “passive path” measurements using this hybrid robotic method. The actual measurements followed with identical parameters.

The 3D-patella position was recorded (six degrees of freedom) along with the corresponding retropatellar pressure distribution according to knee-flexion and medial forces (intact vs. cut MPFL). Measurements were performed for the intact knee (“native”), with muscular quadriceps loading, after opening the joint capsule and with introduced pressure sensor to differentiate each of their influences.

The load free knee-flexion-path (“passive path”) could be calculated for all of the ten knees and was utilised as the basis for all dynamic measurements. There was no alteration of the “flexion-path”. Thus the measurements were only influenced by the variables “capsular joint opening,” “muscular quadriceps loading” and “MPFL-tension”.

The custom made connections between the five quadriceps components and weights proved to be a secure way to prevent rupture due to the applied forces of up to 70 N during the average measuring time of 7.5 h/knee. Only on one knee the Vastus lateralis obliquus muscle ruptured proximally. All reference bases were 100% visible despite the knee flexion form 0°–90°. No loosening of the reference base screws occurred.

Overall the combination of a robotic-assisted, force free dynamic knee-flexion under quadriceps simulation and 3D-patella-tracking seems to be a promising method to evaluate the biomechanical influences of ligaments on the human knee.