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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 3 | Pages 450 - 456
1 Apr 2000
Azangwe G Mathias KJ Marshall D

In a study combining tissue mechanics and fracture morphology for the first time, we examined the ruptured surfaces of anterior cruciate ligaments of rabbits and related their appearance to the initial loading conditions. Sixteen specimens were stretched to failure at rates of displacement of 10 and 500 mm/min. We used video images to study the changes which occurred during the fracture process and SEM to examine the appearance of the ruptured surfaces. The surfaces of ligaments tested at 10 mm/min had more pulled-out collagen fibres and the fibres had more pronounced waviness compared with those tested at 500 mm/min. We have shown that the macroscopic appearance of ruptured ligaments can be related to their microscopic appearance and that it is possible to deduce whether failure was by gradual tearing of the fibres or catastrophic failure


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 4 | Pages 628 - 634
1 Aug 1988
Amis A Kempson S Campbell Miller J

The anterior cruciate ligament was replaced in rabbits, using implants of carbon or polyester filaments with known mechanical properties. The biocompatibility of the implants was assessed in detail using light microscopy, and scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Mechanical tests were made of stability, in comparison with normal joints and controls after excision of the ligament. Some carbon fibre implants broke down in vivo, allowing instability; the fragments caused chronic inflammation. Intact carbon implants did not induce the formation of neoligaments; they were covered by tissue, but there was no ingrowth. Polyester did not degrade mechanically and supported early collagenous ingrowth within the implant, even in the mid-joint space. It was concluded that there was no justification for the use of carbon fibres as anterior cruciate replacements; polyester appeared to be suitable


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 2 | Pages 312 - 316
1 Mar 1987
Thomas N Turner I Jones C

Four types of prosthetic replacement for the anterior cruciate ligament (carbon fibre, carbon fibre and Dacron composite, Dacron alone and bovine xenograft) were assessed at three, six and 12 months after implantation in the knees of New Zealand white rabbits. The synovium and both intra-articular and intra-osseous portions of the ligaments were examined macroscopically, by light microscopy and by scanning electron microscopy. All the knees showed mild synovitis, and there was no significant growth into the intra-articular part of any ligament. Carbon fibre and xenograft did not appear to be suitable materials in this animal model. The composite ligament showed short-term ingrowth of fibrous tissue only into the periphery of the sheath in its intra-osseous portion, whereas the Dacron ligament showed progressive fibrous tissue ingrowth with some bony incorporation of its outer fibres


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 2 | Pages 218 - 220
1 May 1979
Houghton G Rooker G

Hemicircumferential division of the periosteum was performed on the upper tibia of the rabbit. Division of the medial side regularly caused a valgus angulation, but other injuries about the upper tibia had no effect. The cause of deformity after periosteal damage is discussed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 80-B, Issue 3 | Pages 546 - 552
1 May 1998
Rompe JD Kirkpatrick CJ Küllmer K Schwitalle M Krischek O

We aimed to determine whether extracorporeal shock waves of varying intensity would damage the intact tendo Achillis and paratenon in a rabbit model. We used 42 female New Zealand white rabbits randomly divided into four groups as follows: group a received 1000 shock-wave impulses of an energy flux density of 0.08 mJ/mm. 2. , group b 1000 impulses of 0.28 mJ/mm. 2. , group c 1000 impulses of 0.60 mJ/mm. 2. , and group d was a control group. Sonographic and histological evaluation showed no changes in group a, and transient swelling of the tendon with a minor inflammatory reaction in group b. Group c had formation of paratendinous fluid with a significant increase in the anteroposterior diameter of the tendon. In this group there were marked histological changes with increased eosin staining, fibrinoid necrosis, fibrosis in the paratenon and infiltration of inflammatory cells. We conclude that there are dose-dependent changes in the tendon and paratenon after extracorporeal shock-wave therapy and that energy flux densities of over 0.28 mJ/mm. 2. should not be used clinically in the treatment of tendon disorders


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 2 | Pages 228 - 233
1 May 1975
Shaw NE Lacey E

Children undergoing continuous corticosteroid therapy become stunted in height. The mechanism of this inhibition of natural growth has been investigated in the lower femoral epiphysial growth plate of young rabbits on daily corticosteroid. The growth plate became narrow: fewer cells in the germinative zone gave rise to short widely-spaced chondrocyte columns, each with a reduced number of mature and hypertrophic cells; the pattern of trabecular bone in the metaphysis was also disturbed. After even small doses these changes develop very rapidly, and therefore impose a threat to the growth of children receiving treatment with corticosteroids


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 49-B, Issue 2 | Pages 342 - 350
1 May 1967
Guicciardi E Little K

1. In rabbit knees the effects of daily injections of saline, Varidase, blood, blood and Varidase simultaneously, and blood alternating with Varidase every third day have been compared. 2. Saline alone produces changes in joint cartilage comparable with a slight damage to the gel structure of the intercellular matrix. 3. The other four experiments resulted in changes in the articular cartilage comparable with the effects of a partial chemical degradation of the polysaccharide of the intercellular matrix. 4. Blood also induced hypertrophy of the synovial tissues. After the end of the injections healing of the cartilage was slower than with saline or with Varidase. 5. When blood and Varidase were given together the immediate effects were additive, but there was a considerable delay in healing


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 2 | Pages 392 - 400
1 May 1968
Hall-Craggs ECB

1. Experimental epiphysiodesis was performed on either the upper or lower epiphysial cartilage of one tibia of young rabbits, the other tibia serving as a control. 2. Subsequent growth was observed at each epiphysis by radiography. 3. After both operations the normal deceleration of growth rate of the uninjured epiphysis on the experimental side was reduced and this epiphysis made a greater contribution than its control to the final length of the bone. 4. Serial sections of the injured epiphysis revealed that the arrest of growth was due to the formation of a narrow bony bridge between the epiphysial and metaphysial bone. 5. The additional growth of the uninjured epiphysis appeared to have a direct relationship to the deficiency of growth at the epiphysis that had been injured by operation. 6. The results may indicate the existence of a local system of growth control


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 56-B, Issue 2 | Pages 361 - 369
1 May 1974
Lokietek W Pawluk RJ Bassett CAL

1. The electric potentials in undeformed rabbit tibiae were measured in vivo and in vitro. 2. Surgically traumatised soft-tissues, particularly muscle, constituted the major source of voltage in vivo (up to 22 millivolts). 3. Electrical insulation of the tibia from attached soft parts abolished the high potentials on the bone. 4. Similarly high voltages could be reproduced in an excised tibia by substituting a battery for the injured muscle. 5. Changes in voltage also could be induced by altering blood flow rates or by rapid infusion of saline into the medullary space. 6. Death of the cellular elements in bone did not alter the voltage significantly. 7. The electrical contributions of the nervous system, and of dipole components of the extracellular matrix (such as collagen), either were inconsequential or of such low magnitude as to be "masked" by the larger "injury" voltages. Supported by grants from the United States Public Health Service (AM-07822) and the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases (TIAM-05408)


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 37-B, Issue 2 | Pages 324 - 342
1 May 1955
Owen M Jowsey J Vaughan J

1. The detailed anatomy and calcification of the upper half of the tibia in rabbits varying in age from six weeks to twelve months has been studied. 2. The structure of the bone varies at different levels, but a section taken from the same level in the tibia from animals of the same age presents a reasonably constant picture. 3. It has been shown that this variation in structure at different levels is directly related to a difference between the axis of growth and the bone axis. This difference is a result of the unique shape of the tibia. 4. Autoradiographic studies confirm the localised concentration of radioactive strontium in areas of active bone formation where uptake is rapid. 5. The long retention of radioactive strontium in the skeleton (that is, the slow turnover) is a result of the slowness of resorption of bone (endosteal, periosteal or Haversian) in the cortex. Not only is the process slow but it is extremely localised. 6. The significance of these anatomical and physiological characteristics in relation to radiation injury is discussed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 4 | Pages 543 - 549
1 Aug 1988
Kojimoto H Yasui N Goto T Matsuda S Shimomura Y

The histology and mechanics of leg lengthening by callus distraction were studied in 27 growing rabbits. Tibial diaphyses were subjected to subperiosteal osteotomy, held in a neutral position for 10 days and then slowly distracted at 0.25 mm/12 hours, using a dynamic external fixator. Radiographs showed that the gap became filled with callus having three distinct zones. Elongation appeared to occur in a central radiolucent zone; this was bounded by two sclerotic zones. Histologically, the radiolucent zone consisted of longitudinally arranged cartilage and fibrous tissue while the sclerotic zones were formed by fine cancellous bone. New bone occasionally contained islands of cartilage, suggesting it had been formed by endochondral ossification. After completion of distraction, the two sclerotic zones fused, shrank and were eventually absorbed, leaving tubular bone with a new cortex. When the periosteum had been removed at the operation, callus formation was markedly disturbed and there was failure of bone lengthening. Scraping of endosteum, in contrast, did not have a pronounced effect. These results suggest that the preservation of periosteum is essential if bone lengthening by callus distraction is to succeed, and that preservation of the periosteum is more important than careful corticotomy


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 2 | Pages 187 - 191
1 Mar 1988
Makela E Vainionpaa S Vihtonen K Mero M Rokkanen P

Forty-four rabbits were operated on when five weeks old; in one group a 2 mm drill-hole was made in the intercondylar portion of the right femur across the central portion of the growth plate up to the diaphysis, while in the other group a similar drill-hole of 3.2 mm was made. At 3, 6, 12 and 24 weeks after operation, specimens from the growth plates of both femora were analysed using radiographic, microradiographic, histological and histomorphometric techniques. It was found that destruction of 7% of the cross-sectional area of the growth plate caused permanent growth disturbance and shortening of the femur


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 58-B, Issue 2 | Pages 230 - 236
1 May 1976
Matthews P Richards H

The effects of splintage, suture and excision of the tendon sheath on the healing of incompletely transected flexor tendons in the rabbit have been evaluated separately and in various combinations. When all procedures were done together, repair was accompanied by dense adhesion formation with little evidence of any healing activity by the tendon cells. The experiments indicated that the adhesions were the result not of any one single factor studied but of all three contributing in varying degrees. Suturing produced the most adhesions but synovial sheath excision and immobilisation also contributed. It is suggested that these factors are also responsible for the adhesions which occur after flexor tendon repair in clinical practice


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 62-B, Issue 2 | Pages 230 - 237
1 May 1980
Moreland M

In order to study the effect of pure torsional forces upon the rotational development of the growing tibia, 35 immature rabbits underwent torsional loading of one tibia in vivo with a spring-loaded cylinder while the other tibia was a control. The radiographic results showed rotation occurring only at the epiphysial plate. Histologically this was assocaited with angulation of the hypertrophic cartilage columns occurring as little as 24 hours after loading which with longer periods of loading produced angled primary and secondary trabeculae. Radiographic and histological analyses of the diaphysis using tetracycline labelling and Spalteholtz injection techniques failed to show any evidence of cortical remodelling or reorientation of the cortical vessels of a rotational nature, suggesting that rotational modelling occurs solely at the epiphysial plate


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 4 | Pages 545 - 549
1 Aug 1986
De Bastiani G Aldegheri R Renzi Brivio L Trivella G

We have compared, in rabbits, two techniques of limb lengthening by distraction of the epiphyseal plate using a unilateral external fixation frame. In all cases, 14 mm of symmetrical lengthening without deviation was achieved. With rapid distraction at rates of 1 mm per day (distractional epiphyseolysis) separation of the epiphysis from the metaphysis occurred by day 7, and by day 70 almost complete ossification of the cartilage and the elongated segment was evident. In contrast, slow distraction at 0.25 mm every 12 hours (chondrodiatasis) produced hyperplasia of growth cartilage without any evidence of detachment at 28 days, the end of the distraction period. By day 70 the epiphyseal plate had returned to normal thickness with normal cellular morphology, while the lengthened segment was occupied by ossified tissue. The significance of these findings is discussed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 71-B, Issue 1 | Pages 74 - 80
1 Jan 1989
Wakitani S Kimura T Hirooka A Ochi T Yoneda M Yasui N Owaki H Ono K

In an attempt to repair articular cartilage, allograft articular chondrocytes embedded in collagen gel, were transplanted into full-thickness defects in rabbit articular cartilage. Twenty-four weeks after the transplantation, the defects were filled with hyaline cartilage, specifically synthesising Type II collagen. These chondrocytes were autoradiographically proven to have originated from the transplanted grafts. Assessed histologically the success rate was about 80%, a marked improvement over the results reported in previous studies on chondrocyte transplantation without collagen gel. By contrast, the defects without chondrocyte transplantation healed with fibrocartilage. Immunological enhancement induced by transplanted allogenic chondrocytes or collagen was not significant at eight weeks after treatment, so far as shown by both direct and indirect blastformation reactions. Thus, allogenic transplantation of isolated chondrocytes embedded in collagen gel appears to be one of the most promising methods for the restoration of articular cartilage


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 51-B, Issue 2 | Pages 359 - 365
1 May 1969
Hall-Craggs ECB Lawrence CA

1. Arrest of growth at one proximal tibial epiphysis of young rabbits was obtained by stapling. 2. Radiopaque markers allowed the subsequent growth of both proximal and distal epiphyses of the experimental and contralateral tibiae and of both lower femoral epiphyses to be followed radiographically. 3. The reduction in the normal deceleration of growth rate at the distal epiphysis found after epiphysiodesis of the proximal epiphysis was again observed. 4. This change in growth rate was not encountered in the distal femoral epiphysis lying adjacent to the stapled tibial epiphysis. 5. Removal of the staples after the change in growth rate had become established at the distal tibial epiphysis was followed by a return to an approximately normal growth rate by both proximal and distal epiphyses. 6. It is concluded that a direct relationship exists between the additional growth at the uninjured epiphysis and the deficiency in growth obtained at the stapled epiphysis, and that this change in growth rate is limited to the experimental tibia


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 80-B, Issue 5 | Pages 880 - 887
1 Sep 1998
Aizawa T Roach HI Kokubun S Tanaka Y

Chondrocytes of the growth plate are generally assumed to undergo apoptosis, but the mechanisms which induce this cell death are not known. The Fas receptor is a mediator of the apoptotic signal in some systems. We studied its expression in situ in growth plates of rabbits aged from five to 20 weeks. In addition, we investigated the immunolocalisation in the growth plates of the bone proteins, osteonectin and osteocalcin, and the changes in their expression with age. The Fas-positive chondrocytes were found mostly in the hypertrophic zone, as were the osteonectin-positive and osteocalcin-positive cells. The percentage of Fas-positive cells increased with age whereas little change was found in the number of osteonectin-positive and osteocalcin-positive chondrocytes. Many of the Fas-positive chondrocytes were also TUNEL-positive. This strongly suggests that apoptosis in the growth plate is mediated through the Fas system. Double immunostaining for osteocalcin and Fas showed that not all hypertrophic chondrocytes were of the same cell type. Some chondrocytes stained for osteocalcin only, others for Fas only, while some were positive for both


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 5 | Pages 760 - 766
1 Jul 2001
Suzuki H Takahashi K Yamagata M Shimizu S Moriya H Yamazaki M

We have examined the process of fusion of the intertransverse processes and bone graft in the rabbit by in situ hybridisation and evaluated the spatial and temporal expression of genes encoding pro-α1 (I) collagen (COL1A1), pro-α1 (II) collagen (COL2A1) and pro-α1 (X) collagen (COL10A1). Beginning at two weeks after operation, osteogenesis and chondrogenesis occurred around the transverse process and the grafted bone at the central portion of the area of the fusion mass. Osteoblasts and osteocytes at the newly-formed woven bone expressed COL1A1. At the cartilage, most chondrocytes expressed COL2A1 and some hypertrophic chondrocytes COL10A1. In some regions, co-expression of COL1A1 and COL2A1 was observed. At four weeks, such expressions for COL1A1, COL2A1 and COL10A1 became prominent at the area of the fusion mass. From four to six weeks, bone remodelling progressed from the area of the transverse processes towards the central zone. Osteoblasts lining the trabeculae expressed a strong signal for COL1A1. At the central portion of the area of the fusion mass, endochondral ossification progressed and chondrocytes expressed COL2A1 and COL10A1. Our findings show that the fusion process begins with the synthesis of collagens around the transverse processes and around the grafted bone independently. Various spatial and temporal osteogenic and chondrogenic responses, including intramembranous, endochondral and transchondroid bone formation, progress after bone grafting at the intertransverse processes. Bone formation through cartilage may play an important role in posterolateral spinal fusion


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 67-B, Issue 5 | Pages 829 - 834
1 Nov 1985
Amis A Campbell Miller J

The calcaneal tendons of rabbits were excised and either replaced with a carbon or polyester fibre implant, or left as controls. The strength of the neotendons and their mode of failure under tension were examined at intervals up to six months after operation. Return to near normal strength took six months to develop, suggesting that patients having ligament or tendon reconstructions should not resume normal activity for several months. Carbon fibre-based neotendons showed progressive elongation which, unless avoided by a sufficient period of immobilisation, would affect the functional result