scholarly journals Joint surface defects: clinical course and cellular response in spontaneous and experimental lesions

2010 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
pp. 210-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
F Dell’accio ◽  
◽  
TL Vincent
1997 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Hyc ◽  
Jacek Malejczyk ◽  
Anna Osiecka ◽  
Stanislaw Moskalewski

Rat chondrocytes isolated from the articular–epiphyseal cartilage complex were transplanted into defects prepared in articular cartilage and subchondral bone. Transplants were taken for examination after 3 and 8 wk. Cartilage formed by syngeneic chondrocytes did not evoke formation of infiltrations. Contrary to that, in the vicinity of cartilage produced by allogeneic chondrocytes numerous infiltrating cells were present and cartilage resorption could be observed. Cyclosporine-A (CsA) treatment of recipients of allogeneic chondrocytes only partially suppressed accumulation of infiltrating cells and matrix resorption. Antichondrocyte immune response of chondrocyte graft recipients was studied by evaluation of spleen mononuclear cells (SMC) stimulation in mixed splenocytechondrocyte cultures and by evaluation of antichondrocyte cytotoxic antibodies. No difference in stimulation of SMC from intact rats by syngeneic and allogeneic chondrocytes was observed. Stimulation by allogeneic chondrocytes was slightly but significantly higher in recipients of syngeneic grafts. SMC of allogenic chondrocyte recipients were strongly stimulated by allogeneic chondrocytes. This response was absent in recipients treated with CsA. Spontaneous antichondrocyte cytotoxic antibody activity was detected in intact rats and in recipients of syngeneic grafts. In recipients of allogeneic chondrocytes the antibody response against allogeneic chondrocytes was raised but was statistically not significant owing to the considerable variation in the level of spontaneously occurring antichondrocyte antibodies.


Bone ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 139 ◽  
pp. 115520
Author(s):  
Luís F. Mendes ◽  
Kathleen Bosmans ◽  
Inge Van Hoven ◽  
Samuel R. Viseu ◽  
Marina Maréchal ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
pp. S107-S114
Author(s):  
P Krupa ◽  
P Kršek ◽  
M Javorník ◽  
O Dostál ◽  
R Srnec ◽  
...  

Computed tomography (CT) is an effective diagnostic modality for three-dimensional imaging of bone structures, including the geometry of their defects. The aim of the study was to create and optimize 3D geometrical and real plastic models of the distal femoral component of the knee with joint surface defects. Input data included CT images of stifle joints in twenty miniature pigs with iatrogenic osteochondrosis-like lesions in medial femoral condyle of the left knee. The animals were examined eight and sixteen weeks after surgery. Philips MX 8000 MX and View workstation were used for scanning parallel plane cross section slices and Cartesian discrete volume creation. On the average, 100 slices were performed in each stifle joint. Slice matrices size was 512 x 512 with slice thickness of 1 mm. Pixel (voxel) size in the slice plane was 0.5 mm (with average accuracy of +/-0.5 mm and typical volume size 512 x 512 x 100 voxels). Three-dimensional processing of CT data and 3D geometrical modelling, using interactive computer graphic system MediTools formerly developed here, consisted of tissue segmentation (raster based method combination and 5 % of manual correction), vectorization by the marching-cubes method, smoothing and decimation. Stifle- joint CT images of three individuals of different body size (small, medium and large) were selected to make the real plastic models of their distal femurs from plaster composite using rapid prototyping technology of Zcorporation. Accuracy of the modeling was +/- 0.5 mm. The real plastic models of distal femurs can be used as a template for developing custom made press and fit scaffold implants seeded with mesenchymal stem cells that might be subsequently implanted into iatrogenic joint surface defects for articular cartilage-repair enhancement.


1989 ◽  
Vol 31 (6) ◽  
pp. 423-429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mirta C. Remesar ◽  
Jorgelina L. Blejer ◽  
Ricardo Negroni ◽  
Marta R. Nejamkis

Coccidioidomycosis is a systemic mycosis, endemic in arid areas of the American continent. The rat was employed as an experimental host, since it had been shown to reproduce human lesions and present a chronic course of disease with granulomas mainly restricted to lungs. Given the influence of immunosuppressive therapy on the clinical course of human coccidioidomycosis, we studied the effect of cyclophosphamide (CY) in the experimental rat model. Accordingly, animals were inoculated with 400 Coccidioides immitis arthroconidia of the Acosta strain, by intracardiacal route. As single CY doses failed to alter the course of disease, three schedules were used: A) 4 daily doses of 20 mg/kg each, prior to C. immitis inoculation; B) 4 similar daily doses after infection; and C); 6 doses of 20 mg/kg each, given from day +1 to +4, then on days +8 and +9, post infection (pi), taking day 0 as the time of fungal inoculation. The first two schedules inhibited antibody formation up to day 28 pi, without modifying cellular response to coccidioidin as measured by foodpad swelling. Initially, there was greater fungal spread than in controls receiving C. immitis alone, which proved self-limiting in the latter. In contrast, schedule C led to 559r mortality, with both humoral and cellular response abrogation, accompanied by extensive C. immitis dissemination. Histology disclosed significant alterations, such as the persistence of primary infection sporangia, corresponding to the acute stage of coccidioidomycosis in the absence of granuloma development. Therefore, the observed depression in cellular immunity seems responsible for the lack of inflammatory reaction capable of restricting sporangia proliferation in tissues which, in turn, enhances pathogen spread and mortality rate.


1993 ◽  
Vol 2 (6) ◽  
pp. 467-473 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanislaw Moskalewski ◽  
Anna Hyc ◽  
Tomasz Grzela ◽  
Jacek Malejczyk

Syngeneic rat chondrocytes isolated from the articular-epiphyseal cartilage complex were suspended in hyaluronic acid and transplanted intramuscularly or into joint surface defects. Transplants were fixed in ruthenium hexammonium trichloride and embedded in glycol methacrylate. In cartilage nodules produced intramuscularly, chondrocyte hypertrophy and matrix calcification were observed after 2 wk. Partial ossification occurred after 4 wk and the cartilage was almost completely replaced by an ossicle after 8 wk. Only small, dispersed groups of chondrocytes remained within the ossicle. In cartilage formed in joint surface defects a superficial and a deep zone were distinguished. Chondrocytes in the superficial zone did not hypertrophy and cartilage remained unossified. In the deep zone matrix calcification and bone formation occurred. These processes were, however, retarded in comparison with intramuscular transplants. Thus, either intraarticular environment exerted an inhibitory effect on chondrocyte hypertrophy and matrix calcification or articular chondrocytes present among transplanted cells accumulated close to the joint lumen and reconstructed normal articular cartilage.


2000 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 349-357 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanislaw Moskalewski ◽  
Anna Osiecka-Iwan ◽  
Anna Hyc ◽  
Jaroslaw Jozwiak

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