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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 54-B, Issue 3 | Pages 409 - 421
1 Aug 1972
Arnoldi CC Linderholm H Müssbichler H

1. In fifteen patients with unilateral osteoarthritis of the hip bilateral measurements of the intraosseous pressure of the femoral neck and determination of femoral vein pressure were done simultaneously. These pressure examinations were followed by bilateral intraosseous phlebography of the proximal part of the femur. 2. In a second series of fifteen patients the intraosseous pressures of the femoral head and neck were measured simultaneously before operation for osteoarthritis. 3. The pressure in the femoral vein was equal on the two sides. The intraosseous pressure in the femoral neck was always higher in the arthritic hip than on the unaffected side. In hips with osteoarthritis the pressure in the femoral head was higher than the pressure in the neck. 4. Intraosseous phlebography indicated a state of intramedullary venous engorgement in osteoarthritis. The normal channels for venous drainage from the femoral head and neck were not visible in the phlebographs from the arthritic side. Instead, drainage took place through descending intramedullary vessels to the trochanteric region and down into the femoral shaft. The emptying of intraosseous contrast material from the arthritic hip was delayed. 5. The phlebographs indicated that the abnormally high intraosseous pressure observed in osteoarthritis is caused by a high resistance to flow across the cortex of the proximal part of the femur. 6. The aching rest pain typical of severe osteoarthritis was noted only in patients with intraosseous femoral neck pressure above 40 millimetres of mercury, an indication that this type of pain is caused by intramedullary hypertension. The decrease of arteriovenous pressure difference, caused by increase of resistance to venous outflow, is probably accompanied by disturbances of nutritive flow. This "venous ischaemia" may play an important role for the structural changes of cancellous bone in osteoarthritis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 43-B, Issue 4 | Pages 820 - 843
1 Nov 1961
Burwell RG Gowland G

1. The effects of the insertion of pieces of fresh cancellous bone into the subcutaneous tissues of the ear upon lymph nodes and spleens have been investigated in seventy rabbits. 2. The main immunological response is found to occur in the first regional nodes draining the sites of insertion of homografts of bone, which show a considerable increase in weight compared with nodes draining autografts of bone. 3. An increased number of large and medium lymphoid cells occurs principally in the first regional node of the homografted animals, as Scothorne and McGregor (1955) observed using skin as the homografted tissue. 4. The large and medium lymphoid cell response is found in both the cortex and the medulla of the lymph nodes. In the cortex a sectoral distribution of the cellular response is observed and the name reactive cortex is given to these sectors. Evidence is presented to show that the sectoral pattern of reactivity is probably determined by the localised entry into the node of iso-antigens through lymphatic vessels draining the bed of the graft. 5. We have made a quantitative analysis of the large and medium lymphoid cell response in the reactive parts of the diffuse lymphoid tissue of the cortex. The mean maximal large and medium lymphoid cell response occurs five days after the insertion of bone homografts. 6. The origin and fate of the large and medium lymphoid cells and their role in the production of antibodies is reviewed in the light of recent work. 7. A correlation is made between the maximal production of large and medium lymphoid cells in the first regional lymph node, the invasion of the graft bed with small lymphocytes and the inhibition of new bone formation in the homografts


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 45-B, Issue 1 | Pages 162 - 175
1 Feb 1963
Melcher AH Irving JT

1. The effect of implanting heterogenous anorganic bone, homogenous organic bone, autogenous compact bone from the iliac crest, and autogenous bony callus into circumscribed defects in the femur of albino rats of the Wistar strain is described. 2. Neither heterogenous anorganic bone nor homogenous organic bone appeared to induce new bone formation in a healing defect. 3. Some of the osteogenic cells of autogenous callus implants survived transplantation to a bone defect and gave rise to new bone formation. This did not occur when compact bone from autogenous iliac crest was implanted. 4. Implants of autogenous callus, autogenous compact bone, homogenous organic bone and heterogenous anorganic bone all impeded the normal development of host bone trabeculae in a healing bone defect, seemingly because they acted as physical barriers to the proliferating host callus. None of the implant materials appeared to suppress the healing reaction ofthe host. 5. Implanted homogenous organic bone was removed and replaced by host bone more quickly than was implanted heterogenous anorganic bone, and it appears to be the better material for grafting into bone defects. 6. Autogenous callus or autogenous cancellous bone is a superior implant material to autogenous compact bone and is the bone graft material of choice. 7. The absorption of all the implant materials used in this investigation was associated with the presence of multinucleated giant cells. 8. The activity of multinucleated giant cells may be influenced by the organic matrix of the material which is to be absorbed. 9. Except when fresh autogenous callus was implanted into the defects, the rate of healing in the grafted defects was slower than that in the control defects. In the defects grafted with fresh autogenous callus the healing rates of the control and grafted defects were the same


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 1 | Pages 147 - 153
1 Jan 1997
Brown MF Hukkanen MVJ McCarthy ID Redfern DRM Batten JJ Crock HV Hughes SPF Polak JM

We obtained intervertebral discs with cartilage endplates and underlying cancellous bone at operation from patients with degenerative disc disease and then used immunohistochemical techniques to localise the nerves and nerve endings in the specimens. We used antibodies for the ubiquitous neuronal protein gene product 9.5 (PGP 9.5). Immunoreactivity to neuropeptide Y was used to identify autonomic nerves and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and substance P to identify sensory nerves. Blood vessels were identified by immunoreactivity with platelet-endothelial cell-adhesion molecule (CD31; PECAM). In a control group with no known history of chronic back pain, nerve fibres immunoreactive to PGP 9.5 and neuropeptide Y were most closely related to blood vessels, with occasional substance P and CGRP immunoreactivity. In patients with severe back pain and markedly reduced disc height, proliferation of blood vessels and accompanying nerve fibres was observed in the endplate region and underlying vertebral bodies. Many of these nerves were immunoreactive to substance P or CGRP, and in addition, substance P- and CGRP-immunoreactive nociceptors were seen unrelated to blood vessels. Quantification by image analysis showed a marked increase in CGRP-containing sensory nerve fibres compared with normal control subjects. We speculate that a chemotactic response to products of disc breakdown is responsible for the proliferation of vascularity and CGRP-containing sensory nerves found in the endplate region and vertebral body adjacent to degenerate discs. The neuropeptides substance P and CGRP have potent vasodilatory as well as pain-transmitting effects. The increase in sensory nerve endings suggests increase in blood flow, perhaps as an attempt to augment the nutrition of the degenerate disc. The increase in the density of sensory nerves, and the presence of endplate cartilage defects, strongly suggest that the endplates and vertebral bodies are sources of pain; this may explain the severe pain on movement experienced by some patients with degenerative disc disease


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 10, Issue 1 | Pages 10 - 21
1 Jan 2021
Zong Z Zhang X Yang Z Yuan W Huang J Lin W Chen T Yu J Chen J Cui L Li G Wei B Lin S

Aims

Ageing-related incompetence becomes a major hurdle for the clinical translation of adult stem cells in the treatment of osteoarthritis (OA). This study aims to investigate the effect of stepwise preconditioning on cellular behaviours in human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) from ageing patients, and to verify their therapeutic effect in an OA animal model.

Methods

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) were isolated from ageing patients and preconditioned with chondrogenic differentiation medium, followed by normal growth medium. Cellular assays including Bromodeoxyuridine / 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU), quantitative polymerase chain reaction (q-PCR), β-Gal, Rosette forming, and histological staining were compared in the manipulated human mesenchymal stem cells (hM-MSCs) and their controls. The anterior cruciate ligament transection (ACLT) rabbit models were locally injected with two millions, four millions, or eight millions of hM-MSCs or phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Osteoarthritis Research Society International (OARSI) scoring was performed to measure the pathological changes in the affected joints after staining. Micro-CT analysis was conducted to determine the microstructural changes in subchondral bone.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 9, Issue 6 | Pages 22 - 27
1 Dec 2020


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 30-B, Issue 2 | Pages 266 - 279
1 May 1948
Burrows HJ

1. A hope expressed in 1940, that further cases of spontaneous fracture of the lowest third of the apparently normal fibula would be described, has been fulfilled. The literature is here reviewed. Five further personal cases are added. 2. The clinical and radiographic features, diagnosis, treatment and results are considered in the light of the information so far available. Special note is made of misleading freedom of ankle and tarsal movements and the occasional absence of tenderness. 3. It is established that fractures of the lowest third occur particularly in two groups of subjects: 1) young male runners and skaters; 2) active and hard-pressed women of middle age and over. 4. In male runners and skaters the fracture usually occurs through slender, mainly cortical bone, two inches or more above the tip of the lateral malleolus; in middle-aged women the fracture is usually distal to the interosseous ligament through thicker, mainly cancellous bone, one and a half inches from the tip of the lateral malleolus. 5. The most convenient name for both groups of fractures in the lowest third is low fatigue fracture of the fibula. 6. A review of the literature of fatigue fracture of the uppermost third of the fibula shows that it is very often precipitated by jumping. The most convenient name for it is high fatigue fracture of the fibula. 7. Like all clinical classifications this distinction between low and high fractures has exceptions (a low fracture of one fibula in a runner was followed later by a high fracture of the other; most military fractures were high, but a few may have occurred at other levels). 8. Fatigue fracture of the fibula, high or low, may be bilateral. 9. A fracture similarly situated to the high fatigue fracture of the fibula has been frequent in parachute schools. It is a speculative possibility that military and parachutist fractures of the upper third of the fibula indicate the link between true fatigue fractures (as exemplified by march fractures with minimal trauma often repeated) and purely traumatic fractures (with adequate trauma applied once only)


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 9, Issue 8 | Pages 493 - 500
1 Aug 2020
Fletcher JWA Zderic I Gueorguiev B Richards RG Gill HS Whitehouse MR Preatoni E

Aims

To devise a method to quantify and optimize tightness when inserting cortical screws, based on bone characterization and screw geometry.

Methods

Cortical human cadaveric diaphyseal tibiae screw holes (n = 20) underwent destructive testing to firstly establish the relationship between cortical thickness and experimental stripping torque (Tstr), and secondly to calibrate an equation to predict Tstr. Using the equation’s predictions, 3.5 mm screws were inserted (n = 66) to targeted torques representing 40% to 100% of Tstr, with recording of compression generated during tightening. Once the target torque had been achieved, immediate pullout testing was performed.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 9, Issue 5 | Pages 35 - 37
1 Oct 2020


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1349 - 1353
3 Oct 2020
Park CH Song K Kim JR Lee S

Aims

The hypothesis of this study was that bone peg fixation in the treatment of osteochondral lesions of the talus would show satisfactory clinical and radiological results, without complications.

Methods

Between September 2014 and July 2017, 25 patients with symptomatic osteochondritis of the talus and an osteochondral fragment, who were treated using bone peg fixation, were analyzed retrospectively. All were available for complete follow-up at a mean 22 of months (12 to 35). There were 15 males and ten females with a mean age of 19.6 years (11 to 34). The clinical results were evaluated using a visual analogue scale (VAS) and the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society (AOFAS) score preoperatively and at the final follow-up. The radiological results were evaluated using classification described by Hepple et al based on the MRI findings, the location of the lesion, the size of the osteochondral fragment, and the postoperative healing of the lesion.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 1 | Pages 184 - 197
1 Feb 1968
Chesterman PJ Smith AU

1. Techniques are described for homografting intact or partly digested hyaline cartilage or isolated chondrocytes on to cancellous bone in rabbits. 2. Material which had been cooled to and thawed from -79 degrees Centigrade either in the presence or absence of the protective substance dimethyl sulphoxide was grafted in the same way. In control experiments samples were boiled before grafting. 3. Necropsies were performed at intervals varying from two to twenty-six weeks later and the graft sites were removed, fixed and decalcified. Paraffin sections were stained histologically. 4. Freshly isolated chondrocytes or chondrocytes which had been frozen in the presence of dimethyl suiphoxide formed new matrix within two weeks and did not succumb to a homograft reaction. By the sixth week they had become aligned in columns surrounded by well stained matrix. There were signs oferosion by invading capillaries and osteoblasts, but no lymphocytes were seen. By the twelfth week invasion by trabeculae of newly formed bone was well advanced and by the twenty-sixth week the grafts were difficult to find although there had been no sign at any stage of an immunological reaction. 5. New matrix was also formed in homografts of hyaline cartilage which had been treated with papain or with papain and collagenase. After freezing in the presence of dimethyl sulphoxide, small areas ofthe grafts seemed to contain living cells which had formed new matrix. Other areas were disintegrating. 6. The homografts of intact cartilage showed a variety of appearances suggesting that the old matrix was gradually leached out and that chondrocytes liberated in vivo formed a new matrix. 7. Intact or partly digested cartilage which had either been frozen without dimethyl suiphoxide or boiled disintegrated and was rapidly replaced by bone after grafting. 8. When specimens of partly digested cartilage or isolated chondrocytes were homografted On to sites denuded of cartilage on the articular surface of the rabbit humeral head, nodules of fresh cartilage were formed. They were embedded in fibrous tissue derived, presumably, from marrow cavities opened up at the time of operation


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 47-B, Issue 1 | Pages 157 - 180
1 Feb 1965
Lee WR Marshall JH Sissons HA

1. In two dogs, approximately one to two years and three to four months of age, an experimental comparison was made between the calcium accretion rate as defined by the Bauer-Carlsson-Lindquist equation, and the bone formation rate determined by double tetracycline labelling. 2. The overall calcium accretion rate was determined from the specific activity of the blood plasma, and the urinary and faecal excretion of isotope, following an intravenous tracer dose of Ca. 45. A time of five days after injection was used for the calculation of accretion rates, but data for shorter times of calculation are included. 3. Local accretion rates were obtained for different parts of the skeleton by determining the specific activities of bone samples at the end of the experiment. 4. The amount of isotope the uptake of which was not related to new bone formation (the diffuse component) was determined autoradiographically. 5. Local values for appositional growth rate and bone formation rate were obtained, using sections of undecalcified bone specimens, by measuring the linear separation between two tetracycline bone markers and the area of new bone enclosed by them. 6. In the older dog, the measurements for cortical bone showed that the accretion rate was two to three times as great as the bone formation rate: the observed diffuse component was sufficient to account for the greater part of this difference. Measurement of the bone formation rate for cancellous bone presented difficulties, but the approximate values obtained suggested that the accretion rate and the bone formation rate were of about the same order for this tissue. 7. In the younger dog, the bone formation rate could be determined only in cortical bone: at the sites studied, the values for the accretion rate and the bone formation rate did not differ by more than 20 per cent. It is suggested that this is due partly to the low specific activity of the diffuse component in this young animal, and partly to the relatively large amounts of new bone formed during the period of the experiment. 8. Despite the important differences between the rates of calcium accretion and bone formation that were found to exist in regions where there was only a small amount of new bone formation, there was a strong correlation between the two rates. The value of the accretion rate as a parameter of bone metabolism is clear


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 4 | Pages 810 - 823
1 Nov 1960
Roaf R

1. Compression forces are mainly absorbed by the vertebral body. The nucleus pulposus, being liquid, is incompressible. The tense annulus bulges very little. On compression the vertebral end-plate bulges and blood is forced out of the cancellous bone of the vertebral body into the perivertebral sinuses. This appears to be the normal energy-dissipating mechanism on compression. 2. The normal disc is very resistant to compression. The nucleus pulposus does not alter in shape or position on compression or flexion. It plays no active part in producing a disc prolapse. On compression the vertebral body always breaks before the normal disc gives way. The vertebral end-plate bulges and then breaks, leading to a vertical fracture. If the nucleus pulposus has lost its turgor there is abnormal mobility between the vertebral bodies. On very gentle compression or flexion movement the annulus protrudes on the concave aspect–not on the convex side as has been supposed. 3. Disc prolapse consists primarily of annulus; it occurs only if the nucleus pulposus has lost its turgor. It then occurs very easily as the annulus now bulges like a flat tyre. 4. I have never succeeded in producing rupture of normal spinal ligaments by hyperextension or hyperflexion. Before rupture occurs the bone sustains a compression fracture. On the other hand horizontal shear, and particularly rotation forces, can easily cause ligamentous rupture and dislocation. 5. A combination of rotation and compression can produce almost every variety of spinal injury. In the cervical region subluxation with spontaneous reduction can be easily produced by rotation. If disc turgor is impaired this may occur with an intact anterior longitudinal ligament and explains those cases of tetraplegia without radiological changes or a torn anterior longitudinal ligament. The anterior longitudinal ligament can easily be ruptured by a rotation force and in my experience the so-called hyperextension and hyperflexion injuries are really rotation injuries. 6. Hyperflexion of the cervical spine or upper thoracic spine is an anatomical impossibility. In all spinal dislocations a body fracture may or may not occur with the dislocation, depending upon the degree of associated compression. In general, rotation forces produce dislocations, whereas compression forces produce fractures


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 47-B, Issue 4 | Pages 612 - 633
1 Nov 1965
d'Aubigné RM Postel M Mazabraud A Massias P Gueguen J

1. Idiopathic necrosis of the femoral head is generally considered to be a rare disease but it appears to be rather frequent in France in view of the fact that 139 cases were recorded in the orthopaedic clinic of Hôpital Cochin between 1959 and 1963. Ninety cases treated by operation have been analysed in this paper. Men are nearly exclusively affected between the ages of eighteen and seventy, with the highest incidence between thirty and fifty years of age. Both hips are affected in 52 per cent of cases. 2. The etiology is unknown, but steroid therapy was noted in 36 per cent of the cases and some history of slight injury in 30 per cent. The sudden onset of pain in half the cases suggests the obliteration of one of the blood vessels supplying the femoral head. 3. Radiographs are often normal at the time of onset of the symptoms but later they show increased density of the head localised to the antero-superior aspect, and later still collapse of this weight-bearing region. The extent of the lesion appears to be determined from the very beginning rather than to be progressive. The superior joint space is never reduced and may in fact be widened. 4. Pathological examination of the head and neck confirms necrosis of the cancellous bone and the integrity of the overlying cartilage, but shows deep to the necrotic region a highly reactive zone characterised by hypervascularity and raised metabolism. These features have been demonstrated by injection of the blood vessels and also by the uptake of phosphorus 32 and by the succino-deshydrogenase test. 5. In six cases microscopic vascular lesions were found in the antero-lateral pedicle of the femoral head. 6. The high degree of activity of the tissue deep to the necrotic zone gives some hope for revascularisation of the necrotic segment. For this reason protection from pressure may be the way to prevent dramatic collapse of the head. Rest, medical treatment and freedom from weight bearing, however, do not achieve adequate protection. Varus or rotation osteotomy of the femoral neck not only gives relief from pain but appears to prevent collapse of the femoral head. 7. When destruction of the head has already taken place good results may be expected from the insertion of a metallic prosthesis, provided the acetabulum is sound. The results are less favourable when the acetabulum has been altered by secondary arthritic change, and arthrodesis may have to be considered if the disease is unilateral or when a prosthesis has been successfully inserted on the other side


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 9, Issue 10 | Pages 709 - 718
1 Oct 2020
Raina DB Liu Y Jacobson OLP Tanner KE Tägil M Lidgren L

Bone is a dynamic tissue with a quarter of the trabecular and a fifth of the cortical bone being replaced continuously each year in a complex process that continues throughout an individual’s lifetime. Bone has an important role in homeostasis of minerals with non-stoichiometric hydroxyapatite bone mineral forming the inorganic phase of bone. Due to its crystal structure and chemistry, hydroxyapatite (HA) and related apatites have a remarkable ability to bind molecules. This review article describes the accretion of trace elements in bone mineral giving a historical perspective. Implanted HA particles of synthetic origin have proved to be an efficient recruiting moiety for systemically circulating drugs which can locally biomodulate the material and lead to a therapeutic effect. Bone mineral and apatite however also act as a waste dump for trace elements and drugs, which significantly affects the environment and human health.

Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2020;9(10):709–718.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 3 | Pages 477 - 487
1 Aug 1964
Harris NH Kirwan E

1. The clinical and radiological results of seventy-one osteotomies for primary osteoarthritis of the hip performed with internal fixation have been examined two to eight years after operation. Advanced cases where osteotomy would have been purely a salvage procedure were excluded. 2. The hips were divided into two groups: one in a relatively early and the other in a later intermediate stage of the disease. The two criteria for inclusion in the "early" group were a) fiexion movement of 90 degrees or more, either with the patient conscious or completely relaxed under anaesthesia, and b) no collapse of bone seen in the radiograph. 3. The clinical results show that early osteotomy seldom fails to give relief of pain, which is closely correlated with improved function and a favourable assessment of the operation by the patient. A good range of flexion, not less than 70 degrees and frequently 90 degrees, is retained when the criteria mentioned above obtain. 4. The radiological assessment was based upon examination of the joint space, the cystic appearances and the degree of collapse of bone, if any, as seen in serial films. There was convincing evidence of regression indicating arrest of the arthritic process in 70 per cent of the "early" cases. 5. Regression after osteotomy appears to be a well-defined process which is more commonly observed and more complete when the osteotomy is performed sooner rather than at a later stage of the disease. With few exceptions a good radiological result is associated with a good clinical result. 6. Some of the possible causes of failure are discussed. Osteotomy is more likely to fail if delayed till stiffness is severe and collapse of bone has begun. Large cysts, rapid advance of the disease, and a valgus osteotomy in the presence of lateral subluxation may also prejudice the results. 7. This review offers good support for Nissen's suggestion that in primary osteoarthritis of the hip osteotomy should be performed early, while the joint is still mobile and capable of repair, in order to retain good function. 8. Relief from pain is not the only consideration in deciding when to operate; the prospects of arresting the disease and of stimulating a healing reaction in the disordered cancellous bone and articular cartilage by early osteotomy should always be kept in mind. 9. In many respects the findings of this review are complementary to those of Postel and Vaillant (1962) who reported excellent results from varus osteotomy of Pauwels' type in a series of cases of subluxation of the hip with pain but without frank secondary osteoarthritic change


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1025 - 1032
1 Aug 2020
Hampton M Mansoor J Getty J Sutton PM

Aims

Total knee arthroplasty is an established treatment for knee osteoarthritis with excellent long-term results, but there remains controversy about the role of uncemented prostheses. We present the long-term results of a randomized trial comparing an uncemented tantalum metal tibial component with a conventional cemented component of the same implant design.

Methods

Patients under the age of 70 years with symptomatic osteoarthritis of the knee were randomized to receive either an uncemented tantalum metal tibial monoblock component or a standard cemented modular component. The mean age at time of recruitment to the study was 63 years (50 to 70), 46 (51.1%) knees were in male patients, and the mean body mass index was 30.4 kg/m2 (21 to 36). The same cruciate retaining total knee system was used in both groups. All patients received an uncemented femoral component and no patients had their patella resurfaced. Patient outcomes were assessed preoperatively and postoperatively using the modified Oxford Knee Score, Knee Society Score, and 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey questionnaire (SF-12) score. Radiographs were analyzed using the American Knee Society Radiograph Evaluation score. Operative complications, reoperations, or revision surgery were recorded. A total of 90 knees were randomized and at last review 77 knees were assessed. In all, 11 patients had died and two were lost to follow-up.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 6_Supple_B | Pages 62 - 67
1 Jun 2019
Tanzer M Chuang PJ Ngo CG Song L TenHuisen KS

Aims

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the biological fixation of a 3D printed porous implant, with and without different hydroxyapatite (HA) coatings, in a canine model.

Materials and Methods

A canine transcortical model was used to evaluate the characteristics of bone ingrowth of Ti6Al4V cylindrical implants fabricated using laser rapid manufacturing (LRM). At four and 12 weeks post-implantation, we performed histological analysis and mechanical push-out testing on three groups of implants: a HA-free control (LRM), LRM with precipitated HA (LRM-PA), and LRM with plasma-sprayed HA (LRM-PSHA).


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 9, Issue 8 | Pages 524 - 530
1 Aug 2020
Li S Mao Y Zhou F Yang H Shi Q Meng B

Osteoporosis (OP) is a chronic metabolic bone disease characterized by the decrease of bone tissue per unit volume under the combined action of genetic and environmental factors, which leads to the decrease of bone strength, makes the bone brittle, and raises the possibility of bone fracture. However, the exact mechanism that determines the progression of OP remains to be underlined. There are hundreds of trillions of symbiotic bacteria living in the human gut, which have a mutually beneficial symbiotic relationship with the human body that helps to maintain human health. With the development of modern high-throughput sequencing (HTS) platforms, there has been growing evidence that the gut microbiome may play an important role in the programming of bone metabolism. In the present review, we discuss the potential mechanisms of the gut microbiome in the development of OP, such as alterations of bone metabolism, bone mineral absorption, and immune regulation. The potential of gut microbiome-targeted strategies in the prevention and treatment of OP was also evaluated.

Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2020;9(8):524–530.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 8, Issue 6 | Pages 226 - 227
1 Jun 2019
Danese I Pankaj P Scott CEH