Collagen fibre arrangement in the tibial plateau articular cartilage of man and other mammalian species
Experimental animal models are frequently used to study articular cartilage, but the relevance to man remains problematic. In this study animal models were compared by examination of the collagen fibre arrangement in the medial tibial plateau of human, cow, pig, dog, sheep, rabbit and rat specimens....
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of anatomy 1998-07, Vol.193 (1), p.23-34, Article S0021878298003744 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Experimental animal models are frequently used to study
articular cartilage, but the relevance to man
remains problematic. In this study animal models were compared
by examination of the collagen fibre
arrangement in the medial tibial plateau of human, cow, pig, dog,
sheep, rabbit and rat specimens. 24
cartilage samples from each species were prepared and maximum
cartilage thickness in the central tibial
plateau measured. Samples were fixed, dehydrated, freeze-fractured
and imaged by scanning electron
microscopy (SEM). At low magnification, 2 different arrangements
of collagen fibres were observed: leaf-like
(human, pig, dog) and columnar (cow, sheep, rabbit, rat). The
porcine collagen structure was the most
similar to that of man. This arrangement was consistent from the
radial to the upper zones. Under higher
magnification at the surface of the leaves, the collagen was
more randomly oriented, whereas the columns
consisted of parallel collagen fibrils. The maximum thickness
of cartilage did not correlate with the type of
collagen arrangement but was correlated with the body weight
of the species (r=0.785). When using animal
models for investigating human articular cartilage function or
pathology, the differences in arrangement of
collagen fibres in tibial plateau cartilage between laboratory
animals should be considered especially if morphological evaluation is
planned. |
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ISSN: | 0002-9106 0021-8782 1553-0795 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0021878298003744 |