The surface contour of articular cartilage in an intact, loaded joint
The friction coefficients measured in diarthrodial joints are small. Theories of joint lubrication attribute this efficiency to entrapment or movement of synovial fluid, yet anatomical models of the surface are based on studies of isolated fragments of cartilage, not functional joints. To investigat...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of anatomy 1999-07, Vol.195 (1), p.45-56 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The friction coefficients measured in diarthrodial joints are small. Theories of joint lubrication attribute this
efficiency to entrapment or movement of synovial fluid, yet anatomical models of the surface are based on
studies of isolated fragments of cartilage, not functional joints. To investigate the functional interrelationship
of joint surfaces and synovial fluid, the ultrastructure of loaded joints was examined. Twenty-four New
Zealand white rabbit knee joints were loaded either statically or moved ex vivo using simulated muscle
forces and then plunge-frozen under load. After fixation in the frozen/loaded state by freeze-substitution
fixation, the medial joint compartments were embedded in epoxy resin while still articulated. Bone was
trimmed away from the articular surfaces, permitting the cartilage to be sectioned for light and electron
microscopy. These joint surfaces were then compared with controls which were not loaded, not moved or
had been disarticulated prior to embedding. Articular surfaces of loaded joints were smooth at
magnifications from ×35 to ×7500, whereas the tibial surfaces of nonloaded joints were irregular. Small
pools of joint fluid were observed at the meniscal edge and beneath the anterior horn of the meniscus. At
magnifications of ×40000, the joint surfaces were separated by a uniform 100 nm space containing fluid. An
amorphous, electron dense articular surface lamina was present but, when loaded, was thicker and flatter
than previously reported. No surface pits or bumps were visible in embedded, loaded joints. This is the first
ultrastructural study of intact loaded joints. The findings suggest that fluid film lubrication is present in
diarthrodial joints, but the fluid sequestration postulated in several models is not apparent. |
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ISSN: | 0002-9106 0021-8782 1553-0795 1469-7580 |
DOI: | 10.1046/j.1469-7580.1999.19510045.x |