A piezoelectric bone fixation plate for in vivo application and monitoring of mechanical loading during fracture healing

2020 ◽  
Vol 31 (9) ◽  
pp. 095703
Author(s):  
Bradley D Nelson ◽  
Salil Sidharthan Karipott ◽  
Robert E Guldberg ◽  
Keat Ghee Ong
Author(s):  
Esther Wehrle ◽  
Graeme R Paul ◽  
Duncan C Tourolle né Betts ◽  
Gisela A Kuhn ◽  
Ralph Müller

AbstractFracture healing is regulated by mechanical loading. Understanding the underlying mechanisms during the different healing phases is required for targeted mechanical intervention therapies. Here, the influence of individualized cyclic mechanical loading on the remodelling phase of fracture healing was assessed in a mouse femur defect model. After bridging of the defect, a loading group (n=10) received individualized cyclic mechanical loading (8-16 N, 10 Hz, 5 min, 3x/week) based on computed strain distribution in the callus using animal-specific real-time micro-finite element analysis. Controls (n=10) received 0 N treatment at the same post-operative time-points. By registration of consecutive scans, structural and dynamic callus morphometric parameters were followed in three callus sub-volumes and the adjacent cortex showing that the remodelling phase of fracture healing is highly responsive to cyclic mechanical loading with changes in dynamic parameters leading to significantly larger callus formation and mineralization. Loading-mediated maintenance of callus remodelling was associated with distinct effects on Wnt-signalling-associated molecular targets Sclerostin and Rankl in callus sub-regions and the adjacent cortex. Given these distinct local protein expression patterns induced by cyclic mechanical loading, the femur defect loading model with individualized load application seems suitable to understand the local spatio-temporal mechano-molecular regulation of the different fracture healing phases.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Esther Wehrle ◽  
Graeme R. Paul ◽  
Duncan C. Tourolle né Betts ◽  
Gisela A. Kuhn ◽  
Ralph Müller

AbstractFracture healing is regulated by mechanical loading. Understanding the underlying mechanisms during the different healing phases is required for targeted mechanical intervention therapies. Here, the influence of individualized cyclic mechanical loading on the remodelling phase of fracture healing was assessed in a non-critical-sized mouse femur defect model. After bridging of the defect, a loading group (n = 10) received individualized cyclic mechanical loading (8–16 N, 10 Hz, 5 min, 3 × /week) based on computed strain distribution in the mineralized callus using animal-specific real-time micro-finite element analysis with 2D/3D visualizations and strain histograms. Controls (n = 10) received 0 N treatment at the same post-operative time-points. By registration of consecutive scans, structural and dynamic callus morphometric parameters were followed in three callus sub-volumes and the adjacent cortex showing that the remodelling phase of fracture healing is highly responsive to cyclic mechanical loading with changes in dynamic parameters leading to significantly larger formation of mineralized callus and higher degree of mineralization. Loading-mediated maintenance of callus remodelling was associated with distinct effects on Wnt-signalling-associated molecular targets Sclerostin and RANKL in callus sub-regions and the adjacent cortex (n = 1/group). Given these distinct local protein expression patterns induced by cyclic mechanical loading during callus remodelling, the femur defect loading model with individualized load application seems suitable to further understand the local spatio-temporal mechano-molecular regulation of the different fracture healing phases.


2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 154.1-154
Author(s):  
M. Pfeiffenberger ◽  
A. Damerau ◽  
P. Hoff ◽  
A. Lang ◽  
F. Buttgereit ◽  
...  

Background:Approximately 10% of fractures lead to significant fracture healing disorders, with a tendency to further increase due to the aging population. Of note, especially immunosuppressed patients with ongoing inflammation show difficulties in the correct course of fracture healing leading to fracture healing disorders. Most notably, invading immune cells and secreted cytokines are considered to provide an inflammatory microenvironment within the fracture gap, primarily during the initial phase of fracture healing. Current research has the focus on small animal models, facing the problem of translation towards the human system. In order to improve the therapy of fracture healing disorders, we have developed a human cell-basedin vitromodel to mimic the initial phase of fracture healing adequately. This model will be used for the development of new therapeutic strategies.Objectives:Our aim is to develop anin vitro3D fracture gap model (FG model) which mimics thein vivosituation in order to provide a reliable preclinical test system for fracture healing disorders.Methods:To assemble our FG model, we co-cultivated coagulated peripheral blood and primary human mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) mimicking the fracture hematoma (FH model) together with a scaffold-free bone-like construct mimicking the bony part of the fracture gap for 48 h under hypoxic conditions (n=3), in order to reflect thein vivosituation after fracture most adequately. To analyze the impact of the bone-like construct on thein vitroFH model with regard to its osteogenic induction capacity, we cultivated the fracture gap models in either medium with or without osteogenic supplements. To analyze the impact of Deferoxamine (DFO, known to foster fracture healing) on the FG model, we further treated our FG models with either 250 µmol DFO or left them untreated. After incubation and subsequent preparation of the fracture hematomas, we evaluated gene expression of osteogenic (RUNX2,SPP1), angiogenic (VEGF,IL8), inflammatory markers (IL6,IL8) and markers for the adaptation towards hypoxia (LDHA,PGK1) as well as secretion of cytokines/chemokines using quantitative PCR and multiplex suspension assay, respectively.Results:We found via histology that both the fracture hematoma model and the bone-like construct had close contact during the incubation, allowing the cells to interact with each other through direct cell-cell contact, signal molecules or metabolites. Additionally, we could show that the bone-like constructs induced the upregulation of osteogenic markers (RUNX2, SPP1) within the FH models irrespective of the supplementation of osteogenic supplements. Furthermore, we observed an upregulation of hypoxia-related, angiogenic and osteogenic markers (RUNX2,SPP1) under the influence of DFO, and the downregulation of inflammatory markers (IL6,IL8) as compared to the untreated control. The latter was also confirmed on protein level (e.g. IL-6 and IL-8). Within the bone-like constructs, we observed an upregulation of angiogenic markers (RNA-expression ofVEGF,IL8), even more pronounced under the treatment of DFO.Conclusion:In summary, our findings demonstrate that our establishedin vitroFG model provides all osteogenic cues to induce the initial bone healing process, which could be enhanced by the fracture-healing promoting substance DFO. Therefore, we conclude that our model is indeed able to mimic correctly the human fracture gap situation and is therefore suitable to study the influence and efficacy of potential therapeutics for the treatment of bone healing disorders in immunosuppressed patients with ongoing inflammation.Disclosure of Interests:Moritz Pfeiffenberger: None declared, Alexandra Damerau: None declared, Paula Hoff: None declared, Annemarie Lang: None declared, Frank Buttgereit Grant/research support from: Amgen, BMS, Celgene, Generic Assays, GSK, Hexal, Horizon, Lilly, medac, Mundipharma, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, and Sanofi., Timo Gaber: None declared


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tatsuya Shimizu ◽  
Naomasa Fujita ◽  
Kiyomi Tsuji-Tamura ◽  
Yoshimasa Kitagawa ◽  
Toshiaki Fujisawa ◽  
...  

AbstractUltrasound stimulation is a type of mechanical stress, and low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS) devices have been used clinically to promote fracture healing. However, it remains unclear which skeletal cells, in particular osteocytes or osteoblasts, primarily respond to LIPUS stimulation and how they contribute to fracture healing. To examine this, we utilized medaka, whose bone lacks osteocytes, and zebrafish, whose bone has osteocytes, as in vivo models. Fracture healing was accelerated by ultrasound stimulation in zebrafish, but not in medaka. To examine the molecular events induced by LIPUS stimulation in osteocytes, we performed RNA sequencing of a murine osteocytic cell line exposed to LIPUS. 179 genes reacted to LIPUS stimulation, and functional cluster analysis identified among them several molecular signatures related to immunity, secretion, and transcription. Notably, most of the isolated transcription-related genes were also modulated by LIPUS in vivo in zebrafish. However, expression levels of early growth response protein 1 and 2 (Egr1, 2), JunB, forkhead box Q1 (FoxQ1), and nuclear factor of activated T cells c1 (NFATc1) were not altered by LIPUS in medaka, suggesting that these genes are key transcriptional regulators of LIPUS-dependent fracture healing via osteocytes. We therefore show that bone-embedded osteocytes are necessary for LIPUS-induced promotion of fracture healing via transcriptional control of target genes, which presumably activates neighboring cells involved in fracture healing processes.


2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (10) ◽  
pp. 702-709 ◽  
Author(s):  
Darren J Wilson ◽  
Robert L Morgan ◽  
Katy L Hesselden ◽  
James R Dodd ◽  
Si W Janna ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. S75-S76
Author(s):  
Glenn P. Sanders ◽  
Sarah E. Linley ◽  
Elizabeth Brule ◽  
Scott McCallum ◽  
Eric W. Vandeventer ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 120 ◽  
pp. 109436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhizhen Sun ◽  
Hongting Jin ◽  
Huifen Zhou ◽  
Li Yu ◽  
Haitong Wan ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document