Osteochondral Dowel Transplantation for Repair of Focal Defects in the Knee: An Outcome Study Using an Ovine Model
Autor: | Sean McFadden, Kelli Novak, Norman S. Schachar, Locksley E. Mcgann, Mark Hurtig, Ken Muldrew, Roger McPHERSON |
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Rok vydání: | 1998 |
Předmět: |
Cartilage
Articular medicine.medical_specialty Time Factors Knee Injuries Crossbred sheep Dowel Transplantation Autologous Chondrocyte Cryopreservation medicine Animals Transplantation Homologous Bone Transplantation Sheep General Veterinary Adult female business.industry Cartilage Histology Plastic Surgery Procedures Surgical Instruments Surgery Transplantation Disease Models Animal Treatment Outcome medicine.anatomical_structure Female business Follow-Up Studies |
Zdroj: | Veterinary Surgery. 27:5-16 |
ISSN: | 1532-950X 0161-3499 |
Popis: | Objective—A model system was developed to objectively assess the quality of articular cartilage after surgical reconstruction of focal defects in the medial femoral condyle using osteochondral dowel grafts. Study Design—The surgical technique was developed and customized to reproducibly minimize surgical trauma and graft instability in order to improve the survival of the transplanted cartilage and the long-term integrity of the joint surfaces. Animals or Sample Population—24 adult female Suffolk-Romanoff crossbred sheep. Methods—Biomechanical creep testing, paravital staining for chondrocyte viability, histological analysis, and gross morphological analysis were performed at 3, 6, and 12 months postoperatively to compare fresh autografted osteochondral dowels with allografts that had been subject to a freezing protocol known to kill chondrocytes. The latter was used to investigate the time course of cartilage degeneration after injury. These two groups were also compared with normal unoperated control tissue. Results—Biomechanical behavior, chondrocyte survival, and cartilage histology differed significantly between fresh grafts and those that had been frozen. Conclusions—Indentation testing and paravital staining were able to identify degenerative changes earlier than other methods of assessment. The technique developed here reproducibly and reliably transplanted osteochondral dowel grafts while minimizing the confounding effects of surgical trauma and graft instability. Clinical Relevance—The technique provides both a promising surgical technique for the repair of focal defects of the medial femoral condyle and a sensitive model for the future study of cryopreservation strategies for articular cartilage. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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