scholarly journals Intrameniscal Gouty Tophus Originating from Medial and Lateral Meniscus

2021 ◽  
Vol 56 (5) ◽  
pp. 440
Author(s):  
Il-young Park ◽  
Young-mo Kim ◽  
Yong-bum Joo ◽  
Sang-bum Lee
1988 ◽  
Vol 01 (03/04) ◽  
pp. 152-154
Author(s):  
S. Johnson ◽  
D. Hulse

degenerative changes of the involved stifle joint associated with a “bucket handle” tear of the caudal body of the lateral meniscus. Surgical excision of the torn section of meniscus was beneficial in the first patient but this patient had persistant difficulty with the leg after exercise. Gross and microscopic pathology of the involved stifle in the second patient showed the meniscal lesion to be associated with severe cartilage fibrillation of the overlying lateral femoral condyle. As in human beings, the mechanism of injury may have been placement of the foot during vigorous external rotation of the femur with the stifle flexed. Extension of the limb from this position could have resulted in an isolated tear of the lateral meniscus.


2019 ◽  
Vol 36 (02) ◽  
pp. 072-084 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed M.A. Abumandour ◽  
Naglaa Fathi Bassuoni ◽  
Samir El-Gendy ◽  
Ashraf Karkoura ◽  
Raafat El-Bakary

AbstractThe present work aims to provide more anatomical information on the stifle joint of the investigated species using computed tomography with gross anatomical cross-sections. The current work analyzed the stifle joint of the pelvic limbs of 12 adult donkeys, goats and dogs of both genders. The medial condyle of the femur was larger than the lateral one in the donkey, while it was smaller and lower than the lateral one in the goat and in the dog. The unsuitable femoral and tibial condyles were adapted by the presence of menisci. In the donkey, the medial meniscus was crescentic in shape, but it was semicircular in the goat, while in the dog, the medial and lateral menisci were C-shaped. In the donkey, the medial meniscus was larger than the lateral one, but in the goat and in the dog, the lateral meniscus was the largest, and more concave and thicker. The lateral meniscus was semicircular in the donkey, but it was shaped like an elongated kidney in the goat. In the goat and in the dog, the central border of two menisci was thin, concave and notched centrally. The meniscal ligaments included cranial and caudal ligaments of the medial and lateral menisci, and meniscofemoral ligament of the lateral meniscus. In the dog, the cranial ligament of the medial meniscus was absent, and the medial meniscus had no bony attachment to the tibia but it attached to the transverse intermeniscal ligament, which connected the cranial horn of the medial meniscus with the cranial ligament of the lateral meniscus. The meniscofemoral ligament connected the caudal pole of the lateral meniscus with the intercondyloid fossa of the femur.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rei Kubota ◽  
Hideyuki Koga ◽  
Nobutake Ozeki ◽  
Junpei Matsuda ◽  
Yuji Kohno ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (9_suppl7) ◽  
pp. 2325967120S0052
Author(s):  
Ming Zhou

Introduction: A review of the literature demonstrates that injury of the lateral meniscus, anterolateral capsule, and iliotibial(IT ) band or small lateral tibial plateau aggravate the instability of knee and contributes to a high-grade pivot shift in the ACL-deficient knee. Hypotheses: The hypothesis was that disruption of posterior root of the lateral meniscus will further destabilize the ACL-deficient knee and simulated a high-grade pivot shift but posterior root of medial meniscal not. Methods: 6 fresh-frozen cadaveric knees was performed the next test in a custom activity simulator.1.Determine the effect of PRLMT on the stability of ACL-deficient knee.In the pivot shift test, ITB force (50, 75, 100, 125, 150, and 175 N), internal rotation moments (1, 2, and 3 N.m),and valgus moments (5 and 7 N.m). tibial translation of front drawer test were performed by applying a 90-N anterior


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (7_suppl3) ◽  
pp. 2325967121S0010
Author(s):  
Brett Heldt ◽  
Elsayed Attia ◽  
Raymond Guo ◽  
Indranil Kushare ◽  
Theodore Shybut

Background: Acute anterior cruciate ligament(ACL) rupture is associated with a significant incidence of concomitant meniscal and chondral injuries. However, to our knowledge, the incidence of these concomitant injuries in skeletally immature(SI) versus skeletally mature(SM) patients has not been directly compared. SI patients are a unique subset of ACL patients because surgical considerations are different, and subsequent re-tear rates are high. However, it is unclear if the rates and types of meniscal and chondral injuries differ. Purpose: The purpose of this study is to compare associated meniscal and chondral injury patterns between SI and SM patients under age 21, treated with ACL reconstruction for an acute ACL tear. We hypothesized that no significant differences would be seen. Methods: We performed a single-center retrospective review of primary ACL reconstructions performed from January 2012 to April 2020. Patients were stratified by skeletal maturity status based on a review of records and imaging. Demographic data was recorded, including age, sex, and BMI. Associated intra-articular meniscal injury, including laterality, location, configuration, and treatment were determined. Articular cartilage injury location, grade, and treatments were determined. Revision rates, non-ACL reoperation rates, and time to surgery were also compared between the two groups. Results: 785 SM and 208 SI patients met inclusion criteria. Mean BMI and mean age were significantly different between groups. Meniscal tear rates were significantly greater in SM versus SI patients in medial meniscus tears(P<.001), medial posterior horn tears(P=.001), medial longitudinal tears configuration(P=.007), lateral Radial configuration(P=.002), and lateral complex tears(P=.011). Medial repairs(P<.001) and lateral partial meniscectomies(P=.004) were more likely in the SM group. There was a significantly greater number of chondral injuries in the SM versus SI groups in the Lateral(p=.007) and medial compartments(P<.001). SM patients had a significantly increased number of outerbridge grade 1 and 2 in the Lateral(P<.001) and Medial Compartments(P=.013). ACL revisions(P=.019) and Non-ACL reoperations(P=.002) were significantly greater in the SI patients compared to SM. No other significant differences were noted. Conclusion: SM ACL injured patients have a significantly higher rate of medial meniscus tears and medial longitudinal configurations treated with repair, and a significantly higher rate of radial and/or complex lateral meniscus tears treated with partial meniscectomy compared to the SI group. We also found a significantly higher rate of both medial and lateral compartment chondral injuries, mainly grades 1 and 2, in SM compared to SI patients. Conversely, SI ACL reconstruction patients had higher revision and subsequent non-ACL surgery rates.


2021 ◽  
Vol 80 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 418.1-418
Author(s):  
I. Lorenzo ◽  
U. Nogueira-Recalde ◽  
N. Oreiro ◽  
J. A. Pinto Tasende ◽  
M. Lotz ◽  
...  

Background:In Osteoarthritis (OA), defects in macroautophagy (autophagy) are evident and precede joint damage. Indeed, pharmacological activation of autophagy protects against joint damage.Objectives:Therefore, identifying hallmarks associated with specific autophagy subtypes could shed light to fundamental mechanisms of joint disease.Methods:A comparative analysis of 35 autophagy genes was performed from blood from the Prospective OA Cohort of A Coruña (PROCOAC). Non-OA subjects (Age:61,44±1,16 years; BMI:25,25±0,52; Females, n=18) and Knee OA subjects (Age:65,50±1,05 years; BMI:29,55±0,67; Females, n=18, OA grade III-IV) were profiled using an autophagy gene expression array by SYBR green qPCR. Confirmatory studies were performed in blood from Non-OA subjects (Age:60,13±1,12 years; BMI:24,85±0,59; Females; n=30) and Knee-OA subjects (Age:68,4±1,11 years; BMI:29,65±0,55; Females; n=30, OA grade III-IV) by Taqman qPCR. The candidate gene was evaluated in human knee joint tissues (cartilage, meniscus, ligaments, synovium) with different KL grades (Age: KL0=28,3±4,50; KL2=77±6,08; KL4=62,3±3,05, n=3) and in both spontaneous aging (2, 6, 12, 18, and 30 months old, n=3) and surgically-induced OA (10 weeks after surgery, n=4) in mice by IHC. The functional consequences were studied in T/C28a2 and primary human OA chondrocytes. Autophagy, FOXO, Chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA), inflammation, and cellular senescence were analyzing by gene and protein expression. Moreover, oxidative stress and cell death were evaluated by FACS. The contribution of CMA to chondrocyte homeostasis was evaluated by studying the capacity of CMA to restore proteostasis upon autophagy deficiency by siATG5.Results:15 autophagy-related genes were significantly downregulated in blood from knee OA patients compared to non-OA patients. No significant upregulation was found for any studied gene, although a trend towards upregulation was found in genes involved in the mTOR pathway. Four key autophagy-related genes, including ATG16L2, ATG12, ATG4B and MAP1LC3B were found downregulated in knee OA patients. Interestingly, HSP90AA1 and HSPA8, CMA markers involved in stress response and protein folding, were downregulated. Confirmatory studies showed a significant downregulation of MAP1LC3B and HSP90AA1 in blood from knee OA patients. Remarkably, HSP90A was found reduced in femoral cartilage (medial and lateral), meniscus and ACL. Moreover, this reduction was higher in medial cartilage compared to lateral cartilage and meniscus, while in synovial membrane, HSP90A expression was found increased. This expression signature was dependent on OA grade severity. In addition, we observed a decrease of HSP90A with aging and OA in mice. The functional consequences of HSP90AA1 gene silencing are related to an increase in NFκB, MMP13, and p16 expression. Interestingly, LAMP2A, a key CMA mediator, HSPA8, MAP1LC3B and FoxO1 expression were upregulated in chondrocytes with HSP90AA1 deficiency, which might indicate an early response to maintain homeostasis. On the other hand, LAMP2A protein is decreased upon HSP90AA1 deficiency, while LC3II and p62 were increased, indicating a failure in the autophagy flux that leads to impaired lysosomal degradation.Moreover, p21, p16 and prbS6 were increased upon HSP90AA1 deficiency, besides increasing mitochondrial ROS production and apoptosis. ATG5 silencing blocks autophagy by reducing LC3II and increasing prbs6, p62, p16 and p21. Interestingly, LAMP2A and HSP90A were found increased, indicating a possible compensative activation of CMA in response to autophagy defects. These results support that HSP90A has an important role in chondrocyte homeostasis by participating in the cross-talk between CMA and autophagy.Conclusion:Taking together, we identified HSP90A, a CMA regulator, as critical in chondrocyte homeostasis. These disease mechanisms are relevant in OA and constitute hallmarks potentially useful to prevent OA progression.References:[1]Caramés B, et al. Arthritis Rheum. 2010, 2015;[2]Caramés B, et al. Ann Rheum Dis. 2012.Disclosure of Interests:None declared


Author(s):  
Shun-Jie Yang ◽  
Jian Li ◽  
Yang Xue ◽  
Zhong Zhang ◽  
Gang Chen

Abstract Introduction The postoperative effect of arthroscopy in the treatment of symptomatic discoid lateral meniscus (DLM) varies greatly among individuals. Therefore, this study aims to investigate the factors affecting the postoperative outcomes of symptomatic DLM. Materials and methods According to the inclusion and exclusion criteria, patients with symptomatic single-knee DLM who underwent arthroscopic surgery at our hospital from 9/2008 to 9/2015 were included. Retrospectively collected 16 factors probably affecting postoperative outcomes. The Ikeuchi grade system was used to evaluate the knee joint function. Univariate analysis was performed by Kruskal–Wallis rank-sum test or Mann–Whitney U test, and multivariate analysis by ordered logistic regression. P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results A sum of 502 patients was included, including 353 females (70.3%) and 149 males (29.7%). Difference between preoperative and postoperative Ikeuchi grade was statistically significant (P < 0.001). Female was bad to obtain a good Ikeuchi grade (P = 0.009, OR 0.458). Outerbridge grade (P = 0.018, OR 0.638) was negatively correlated with Ikeuchi grade. BMI (P = 0.001, OR 0.875) and work intensity (P = 0.020, OR 0.611) were inversely correlated with Ikeuchi grade. Age of onset (P < 0.001, OR 0.956) and symptoms duration (P < 0.001, OR 0.988) were negatively correlated with Ikeuchi grade. Besides, compared to total meniscectomy, meniscoplasty with a repair was an unfavourable factor for Ikeuchi grade (P = 0.044, OR 0.245). Conclusions With the increase of BMI, work intensity, age of onset, duration of symptoms, and the severity of cartilage lesion, the postoperative results become worse. Moreover, female and meniscoplasty with repair are risk factors for the postoperative outcomes.


Author(s):  
Yuji Kohno ◽  
Hideyuki Koga ◽  
Nobutake Ozeki ◽  
Junpei Matsuda ◽  
Mitsuru Mizuno ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (7_suppl3) ◽  
pp. 2325967121S0004
Author(s):  
David A. Kolin ◽  
Brody Dawkins ◽  
Joshua Park ◽  
Peter D. Fabricant ◽  
Allison Gilmore ◽  
...  

Background: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears are frequently associated with meniscal tears. Previous studies have shown that secondary meniscal tears—occurring after the initial ACL injury—are associated with greater delays from injury to ACL reconstruction (ACLR), but frequently use dichotomous categories of acute versus delayed ACLR. Purpose: As meniscal damage is likely accrued constantly over time, we investigated the variability of concurrent meniscal injuries as a function of time from injury to ACLR in a pediatric and adolescent population. Methods: We performed a retrospective review of all patients ≤18 years who underwent an ACLR between 2014 and 2018 at one of two tertiary academic hospitals. Outliers were excluded if time from injury to ACLR was greater than 78 weeks. Records were reviewed to assess patients’ dates of injury and surgery. The prevalence of concurrent medial and/or lateral meniscal injury was evaluated at the time of surgery for each patient. Adjusted relative risks (ARRs) of meniscal injury were calculated using Poisson regression models adjusted for age, sex, and body-mass index. Logistic regression was used to model the predicted probability of medial meniscal tears. Results: 546 patients met inclusion criteria. The mean age of participants was 15.3 years (S.D., 1.6), and 277 (50.7%) patients were male. Overall, 344 (63.0%) patients had a meniscal tear. 169 (49.1%) tears occurred at the medial meniscus, and 257 (74.7%) occurred at the lateral meniscus (Table 1). Compared to females, males had a greater risk of lateral meniscal injury (ARR, 1.46; 95% CI, 1.20-1.77) but not medial meniscal injury (ARR, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.77-1.31) (Figure 1). When considering all meniscal tears, time from injury to ACLR was not associated with increased risk of a tear (ARR, 1.01; 95% CI, 1.00-1.01). However, for medial meniscal tears, there was a significant association between time from injury to ACLR, in weeks, and meniscal tears (ARR, 1.02; 95% CI, 1.01-1.03, P = 0.003). A ten-week delay was associated with a 20% increased risk of medial meniscal injury (Figure 2). Conclusion: In pediatric and adolescent ACLR patients, the risk of any meniscal injury was not associated with delay from injury to surgery. However, the risk of medial meniscal injury increased by 2% each week from injury to surgery. [Table: see text][Figure: see text][Figure: see text]


Author(s):  
Alexander Korthaus ◽  
Malte Warncke ◽  
Geert Pagenstert ◽  
Matthias Krause ◽  
Karl-Heinz Frosch ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction ACL injury is one of the most common injuries of the knee joint in sports. As accompanying osseous injuries of the ACL rupture a femoral impression the so-called lateral femoral notch sign and a posterolateral fracture of the tibial plateau are described. However, frequency, concomitant ligament injuries and when and how to treat these combined injuries are not clear. There is still a lack of understanding with which ligamentous concomitant injuries besides the anterior cruciate ligament injury these bony injuries are associated. Materials and methods One hundred fifteen MRI scans with proven anterior cruciate ligament rupture performed at our center were retrospectively evaluated for the presence of a meniscus, collateral ligament injury, a femoral impression, or a posterolateral impression fracture. Femoral impressions were described according to their local appearance and posterolateral tibial plateau fractures were described using the classification of Menzdorf et al. Results In 29 cases a significant impression in the lateral femoral condyle was detected. There was a significantly increased number of lateral meniscal (41.4% vs. 18.6% p = 0.023) and medial ligament (41.4% vs. 22.1%; p = 0.040) injuries in the group with a lateral femoral notch sign. 104 patients showed a posterolateral bone bruise or fracture of the tibial plateau. Seven of these required an intervention according to Menzdorf et al. In the group of anterior cruciate ligament injuries with posterolateral tibial plateau fracture significantly more lateral meniscus injuries were seen (p = 0.039). Conclusion In the preoperative planning of ACL rupture accompanied with a positive femoral notch sign, attention should be paid to possible medial collateral ligament and lateral meniscus injuries. As these are more likely to occur together. A posterolateral impression fracture of the tibial plateau is associated with an increased likelihood of the presence of a lateral meniscal injury. This must be considered in surgical therapy and planning and may be the indication for necessary early surgical treatment.


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