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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 2 | Pages 336 - 341
1 Mar 1999
Sugihara S van Ginkel AD Jiya TU van Royen BJ van Diest PJ Wuisman PIJM

From November 1994 to March 1997, we harvested 137 grafts of the femoral head from 125 patients for donation during total hip arthroplasty according to the guidelines of the American Associations of Tissue Banks (AATB) and the European Association of Musculo-Skeletal transplantation (EAMST). In addition to the standards recommended by these authorities, we performed histopathological examination of a core biopsy of the retrieved bone allograft and of the synovium. Of the 137 allografts, 48 (35.0%) fulfilled all criteria and were free for donation; 31 (22.6%) were not regarded as suitable for transplantation because the serological retests at six months were not yet complete and 58 (42.3%) were discarded because of incomplete data. Of those discarded, five showed abnormal histopathological findings; three were highly suspicious of low-grade B-cell lymphoma, one of monoclonal plasmacytosis and the other of non-specific inflammation of bone marrow. However, according to the standards of the AATB or EAMST they all met the criteria and were eligible for transplantation. Our findings indicate that the incidence of abnormal histopathology in these retrieved allografts was 3.6%. Since it is essential to confirm the quality of donor bones in bone banking, we advise that histopathological screening of donor bone should be performed to exclude abnormal allografts


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 2 | Pages 299 - 305
1 Mar 2003
Hyvönen P Melkko J Lehto VP Jalovaara P

Our aim was to evaluate bursal involvement at different stages of the impingement syndrome as judged by conventional histopathological examination and expression of tenascin-C, which is known to reflect active reparative processes in different tissues and disorders. Samples of subacromial bursa were taken from 33 patients with tendinitis, 11 with a partial tear and 18 with a complete tear of the rotator cuff, and from 24 control shoulders. We assessed the expression of tenascin-C, the thickness of the bursa, and the occurrence and degree of fibrosis, vascularity, haemorrhage and inflammatory cells. The expression of tenascin-C was significantly more pronounced in the complete tear group (p < 0.001) than in the partial tear, tendinitis or control groups. It was more pronounced in the tendinitis group than in the control group (p = 0.06), and there was more fibrosis in all the study groups than in the control group. The changes in the other parameters were not equally distinctive. Expression of tenascin-C did not correlate with the conventional histopathological parameters, suggesting that these markers reflect different phases of the bursal reaction. Tenascin-C seems to be a general indicator of bursal reaction, being especially pronounced at the more advanced stages of impingement and this reaction seems to be an essential part of the pathology of impingement at all its stages


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 7 | Pages 960 - 966
1 Jul 2006
Pluhar GE Turner AS Pierce AR Toth CA Wheeler DL

Critical size defects in ovine tibiae, stabilised with intramedullary interlocking nails, were used to assess whether the addition of carboxymethylcellulose to the standard osteogenic protein-1 (OP-1/BMP-7) implant would affect the implant’s efficacy for bone regeneration. The biomaterial carriers were a ‘putty’ carrier of carboxymethylcellulose and bovine-derived type-I collagen (OPP) or the standard with collagen alone (OPC). These two treatments were also compared to “ungrafted” negative controls. Efficacy of regeneration was determined using radiological, biomechanical and histological evaluations after four months of healing. The defects, filled with OPP and OPC, demonstrated radiodense material spanning the defect after one month of healing, with radiographic evidence of recorticalisation and remodelling by two months. The OPP and OPC treatment groups had equivalent structural and material properties that were significantly greater than those in the ungrafted controls. The structural properties of the OPP- and OPC-treated limbs were equivalent to those of the contralateral untreated limb (p > 0.05), yet material properties were inferior (p < 0.05). Histopathology revealed no residual inflammatory response to the biomaterial carriers or OP-1. The OPP- and OPC-treated animals had 60% to 85% lamellar bone within the defect, and less than 25% of the regenerate was composed of fibrous tissue. The defects in the untreated control animals contained less than 40% lamellar bone and more than 60% was fibrous tissue, creating full cortical thickness defects. In our studies carboxymethylcellulose did not adversely affect the capacity of the standard OP-1 implant for regenerating bone


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 4 | Pages 592 - 599
1 May 2002
Maier M Milz S Tischer T Münzing W Manthey N Stäbler A Holzknecht N Weiler C Nerlich A Refior HJ Schmitz C

There is little information about the effects of extracorporeal shock-wave about application the effects (ESWA) of on normal bone physiology. We have therefore investigated the effects of ESWA on intact distal rabbit femora in vivo. The animals received 1500 shock-wave pulses each of different energy flux densities (EFD) on either the left or right femur or remained untreated. The effects were studied by bone scintigraphy, MRI and histopathological examination. Ten days after ESWA (0.5 mJ/mm. 2. and 0.9 mJ/mm. 2. EFD), local blood flow and bone metabolism were decreased, but were increased 28 days after ESWA (0.9 mJ/mm. 2. ). One day after ESWA with 0.9 mJ/mm. 2. EFD but not with 0.5 mJ/mm. 2. , there were signs of soft-tissue oedema, epiperiosteal fluid and bone-marrow oedema on MRI. In addition, deposits of haemosiderin were found epiperiosteally and within the marrow cavity ten days after ESWA. We conclude that ESWA with both 0.5 mJ/mm. 2. and 0.9 mJ/mm. 2. EFD affected the normal bone physiology in the distal rabbit femur. Considerable damaging side-effects were observed with 0.9 mJ/mm. 2. EFD on periosteal soft tissue and tissue within the bone-marrow cavity


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 90-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1517 - 1521
1 Nov 2008
Liu DD Hsieh N Chen HI

Several experimental models have been used to produce intravascular fat embolism. We have developed a simple technique to induce fat embolism using corn oil emulsified with distilled water to form fatty micelles. Fat embolism was produced by intravenous administration of these fatty micelles in anaesthetised rats, causing alveolar oedema, haemorrhage and increased lung weight.

Histopathological examination revealed fatty droplets and fibrin thrombi in the lung, kidney and brain. The arteriolar lumen was filled with fatty deposits. Following fat embolism, hypoxia and hypercapnia occurred. The plasma phospholipase A2, nitrate/nitrite, methylguidanidine and proinflammatory cytokines were significantly increased. Mass spectrometry showed that the main ingredient of corn oil was oleic acid.

This simple technique may be applied as a new animal model for the investigation of the mechanisms involved in the fat embolism syndrome.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1097 - 1101
1 Aug 2006
Jambhekar NA Kulkarni SP Madur BP Agarwal S Rajan MGR

A retrospective series of 45 cases of chronic osteomyelitis collected over a period of 14 years was histologically classified into tuberculous osteomyelitis (25) and chronic non-granulomatous osteomyelitis (20). The tuberculous osteomyelitis group was divided into three subgroups: a) typical granulomas (13 cases); b) ill-defined granulomas (seven cases), and c) suspected granulomas (five cases). An in-house polymerase chain reaction amplifying the 245 bp nucleotide sequence, and capable of detecting 10 fg of DNA of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, was used on the DNA extracted from the paraffin blocks. The polymerase chain reaction was positive in 72% of cases (18) of tuberculous osteomyelitis, but when typical cases of tuberculous osteomyelitis with confirmed granulomas were considered (13), this increased to 84.6% (11). The chronic non-granulomatous osteomyelitis group gave positive polymerase chain reaction results in 20% of the cases (4).

Our preliminary study on tuberculous osteomyelitis shows that the polymerase chain reaction can be a very useful diagnostic tool, since a good correlation was seen between typical granulomas and polymerase chain reaction with a sensitivity of 84.6% and a specificity of 80%. In addition, our study shows that tuberculous osteomyelitis can be diagnosed in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues in the absence of typical granulomas.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 2 | Pages 270 - 275
1 Feb 2006
Orhan Z Cevher E Mülazimoglu L Gürcan D Alper M Araman A Özsoy Y

Ciprofloxacin hydrochloride-loaded microspheres were prepared by a spray-drying method using pectin and chitosan. The effects of different polymers and drug ratios were investigated.

The most appropriate carriers were selected by in vitro testing. A rat methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus osteomyelitis model was used to evaluate the effects of the loaded microspheres.

The drug was released rapidly from the pectin carrier but this was more sustained in the chitosan formulation.

Chitosan microspheres loaded with ciprofloxacin hydrochloride were more effective for the treatment of osteomyelitis than equivalent intramuscular antibiotics.