Biochemical and Biomechanical Properties of Lesion and Adjacent Articular Cartilage After Chondral Defect Repair in an Equine Model
Background: Chondral defects may lead to degradative changes in the surrounding cartilage, predisposing patients to developing osteoarthritis. Purpose: To quantify changes in the biomechanical and biochemical properties of the articular cartilage adjacent to chondral defects after experimental defec...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American journal of sports medicine 2005-11, Vol.33 (11), p.1647-1653 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: Chondral defects may lead to degradative changes in the surrounding cartilage, predisposing patients to developing osteoarthritis.
Purpose: To quantify changes in the biomechanical and biochemical properties of the articular cartilage adjacent to chondral defects
after experimental defect repair.
Study Design: Controlled laboratory study.
Methods: Specimens were harvested from tissue within (lesion), immediately adjacent to, and at a distance from (remote area) a full-thickness
cartilage defect 8 months after cartilage repair with genetically modified chondrocytes expressing insulin-like growth factorâI
or unmodified, control chondrocytes. Biomechanical properties, including instantaneous Youngâs and equilibrium aggregate moduli,
were determined by confined compression testing. Biochemical properties, such as water and proteoglycan content, were also
measured.
Results: The instantaneous Youngâs modulus, equilibrium modulus, and proteoglycan content increased, whereas water content decreased
with increasing distance from the repaired lesion. The instantaneous Youngâs and equilibrium moduli of the adjacent articular
cartilage were 80% and 50% that of remote area samples, respectively, whereas water content increased 0.9% and proteoglycan
content was decreased by 35%. No significant changes in biomechanical and biochemical properties were found either in the
lesion tissue or in adjacent cartilage with genetic modification of the chondrocytes.
Conclusion: Articular cartilage adjacent to repaired chondral defects showed significant remodeling 8 months after chondral defect repair,
regardless of whether genetically modified or unmodified cells were implanted.
Clinical Relevance: Changes in the biochemical and biomechanical properties of articular cartilage adjacent to repaired chondral defects may
represent remodeling as part of an adaptive process or degeneration secondary to an altered distribution of joint forces.
Quantification of these changes could provide important parameters for assessing progress after operative chondral defect
repair.
Keywords:
chondral defect repair
biochemical and biomechanical properties
articular cartilage
confined compression testing |
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ISSN: | 0363-5465 1552-3365 |
DOI: | 10.1177/0363546505275487 |