To investigate differences in the drop vertical jump height in female adolescents with an ACL injury and healthy controls and the contribution of each limb in this task.
Forty female adolescents with an ACL injury (ACLi, 15.2 ± 1.4 yrs, 164.6 ± 6.0 cm, 63.1 ± 10.0 kg) and thirty-nine uninjured (CON, 13.2 ± 1.7 yrs, 161.7 ± 8.0 cm, 50.6 ± 11.0 kg) were included in this study. A 10-camera infrared motion analysis system (Vicon, Nexus, Oxford, UK) tracked pelvis, thigh, shank, and foot kinematics at 200Hz, while the participants performed 3 trials of double-legged drop vertical jumps (DVJ) on two force plates (Bertec Corp., Columbus, USA) sampled at 2000Hz.The maximum jump height normalised by dominant leg length was compared between groups using independent samples
To investigate if the countermovement jump height differs between ACL injured and uninjured female adolescents and to explore kinematic differences between limbs. Additionally, the association between isometric knee extension strength and jump height was investigated. Thirty-one ACL injured female adolescents (ACLi, 15.3 ± 1.4yrs, 163.9 ± 6.6cm, 63.0 ± 9.3kg) and thirty-eight uninjured (CON, 13.2±1.7yrs, 161.7 ± 8.1cm, 50.6 ± 11.1kg) participated in this study. All participants performed a countermovement jump task, with 3D kinematics collected using a motion analysis system (Vicon, Nexus, Oxford, UK) at 200Hz, and a maximum isometric knee extension task on an isokinetic dynamometer (Biodex Medical Systems, New York, USA) for three trials. The peak torque was extracted from the isometric trials. Independent samples
Rotator cuff repair has excellent clinical outcomes but continues to be a challenge when it comes to large and massive tears as well as revision procedures. Reported symptomatic retear rates are still too high to be acceptable. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a combination of augmentation techniques consisting of microfractures of the greater tuberosity, extracellular matrix (ECM) patch graft and subsequent platelet concentrate (PC) subacromial injections in revision rotator cuff repair. The study was designed as a retrospective comparative study on prospectively collected data from a consecutive cohort of patients. All patients who underwent arthroscopic revision rotator cuff repair for symptomatic failure of previous posterosuperior rotator cuff repair were considered eligible for the study. Symptomatic failure had been diagnosed according to clinical examination and confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Structural integrity had been assessed on MRI and classified according to Sugaya classification. Only patients affected by stage IV-V were considered eligible. Tear reparability was confirmed during arthroscopy. Only patients with a minimum 2 years follow-up were included. Patients were divided in two groups. In group 1 (control group) a standard arthroscopic revision and microfractures of the greater tuberosity were performed; in group 2 (experimental group), microfractures of the greater tuberosity and a ECM patch graft were used to enhance tendon repair, followed by postoperative PC injections. Minimum follow-up was 12 months. Primary outcome was the Constant-Murley score (CMS) normalized for age and gender. Subjective outcome was assessed with the Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (DASH) score in its short version (Quick-DASH). Tendon integrity was assessed with MRI at 6 months after surgery. Comparison between groups for all discrete variables at baseline and at follow-up was carried out with the Student's
Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common disorder of the Sternoclavicular Joint (SCJ). In our case-control study, we evaluated the relationship between clavicular length and OA at the SCJ. CT scans of adults presenting to the Emergency Department of our hospital were examined to look for OA, defined as the presence of osteophytes, subchondral cysts, or cortical sclerosis at the SCJ. Medial-most and lateral-most points of the clavicle were marked on the slices passing through the SC and AC joints respectively. Using x, y, and z-axis coordinates from the DICOM metadata, clavicular length was calculated as the distance between these two points with 3D geometry. Preliminary data of 334 SCJs from 167 patients (64% males, 36% females) with a mean age of 48.5 ± 20.5 years were analysed. Multivariate regression models revealed that age and clavicular length were independent risk factors for OA while gender did not reach statistical significance. A 1mm increase in length was associated with 9% and 7% reduction in the odds of developing OA on the left and the right respectively. Comparing the mean clavicular length using
With an aging population and increase in total knee arthroplasty, periprosthetic distal femur fractures (PDFFs) have increased. The differences between these fractures and native distal femur fractures (NDFF) have not been comprehensively investigated. The purpose of this study was to compare the demographic, fracture, and treatment details of PDFFs compared to NDFFs. A retrospective study of patients ≥ 18 years old who underwent surgical treatment for either a NDFF or a PDFF from 2010 to 2020 at a level 1 trauma center was performed. Demographics, AO/OTA fracture classification, quality of reduction, fixation constructs, and unplanned revision reoperation were compared between PDFF patients and NDFF patients using
A number of techniques have been developed to improve the immediate mechanical anchorage of implants for enhancing implant longevity. This issue becomes even more relevant in patients with osteoporosis who have fragile bone. We have previously shown that a dynamic hip screw (DHS) can be augmented with a calcium sulphate/hydroxyapatite (CaS/HA) based injectable biomaterial to increase the immediate mechanical anchorage of the DHS system to saw bones with a 400% increase in peak extraction force compared to un-augmented DHS. The results were also at par with bone cement (PMMA). The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of CaS/HA augmentation on the integration of a different fracture fixation device (gamma nail lag-screw) with osteoporotic saw bones. Osteoporotic saw bones (bone volume fraction = 15%) were instrumented with a gamma nail without augmentation (n=8) or augmented (n=8) with a CaS/HA biomaterial (Cerament BVF, Bonesupport AB, Sweden) using a newly developed augmentation method described earlier. The lag-screws from both groups were then pulled out at a displacement rate of 0.5 mm/s until failure. Peak extraction force was recorded for each specimen along with photographs of the screws post-extraction. A non-parametric
To quantify bone-nail fit in response to varying nail placements by entry point translation in straight antegrade humeral nailing using three-dimensional (3D) computational analysis. CT scans of ten cadaveric humeri were processed in 3D Slicer to obtain 3D models of the cortical and cancellous bone. The bone was divided into individual slices each consisting of 2% humeral length (L) with the centroid of each slice determined. To represent straight antegrade humeral nail, a rod consisting of two cylinders with diameters of 9.5mm and 8.5mm and length of 0.22L mm and 0.44L mm respectively joined at one end was modelled. The humeral head apex (surgical entry point) was translated by 1mm in both anterior-posterior and medio-lateral directions to generate eight entry points. Total nail protrusion surface area, maximum nail protrusion distance into cortical shell and top, middle, bottom deviation between nail and intramedullary cavity centre were investigated. Statistical analysis between the apex and translated entry points was conducted using paired
Nuclear factor erythroid 2–related factor 2 (Nrf2)/antioxidant response element (ARE) pathway is key in maintaining redox homeostasis and the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis (OA) involves oxidative distress. We thus investigated whether Nrf2/ARE signaling may control expression of key chondrogenic differentiation and hyaline cartilage maintenance factor SOX9. In human C-28/I2 chondrocytes SOX9 expression was measured by RT–qPCR after shRNA-mediated knockdown of Nrf2 or its antagonist the Kelch-like erythroid cell-derived protein with cap “n” collar homology-associated protein 1 (Keap1). Putative ARE-binding sites in the proximal SOX9 promoter region were inactivated, cloned into pGL3, and co-transfected with phRL–TK for dual-luciferase assays to verify whether Nrf2 transcriptionally regulates SOX9. SOX9 promoter activity without and with Nrf2-inducer methysticin were analyzed. Sox9 expression in articular chondrocytes was correlated to cartilage thickness and degeneration in wild-type (WT) and Nrf2-knockout mice. Data were analyzed by one-way ANOVA, a Student's
Background. The molecular mechanisms underlying non-union bone fractures largely remain elusive. Recently, spatial transcriptomics approaches for musculoskeletal tissue samples have been developed requiring direct placement of histology sections on barcoded slides. However, Formalin-Fixed-Paraffin-Embedded (FFPE) bone sections have been associated with limited RNA quality and read depth compared to soft tissue. Here, we test spatial transcriptomics workflows based on transcriptomic probe transfer to characterize molecular features discriminating non-union and union bone fractures in mice. Method. Histological sections (n=8) used for spatial transcriptomics (Visium CytAssist FFPE; 10x Genomics, n=4 on glass slides, n=4 on hydrogel-coated slides) were obtained from a fracture healing study in female 20-week-old C57BL/6J mice receiving either a femur osteotomy (0.7mm) or a segmental defect (2.4mm) (license 22/2022, Grisons CH). Sequence alignment and manual segmentation of different tissues (bone, defect region/callus, bone marrow, muscle) were performed using SpaceRanger and LoupeBrowser (10x Genomics). Differential gene expression was performed using DESeq2 (Seurat) followed by Gene-Set-Enrichment-Analysis (GSEA) of Gene Ontology (ClusterProfiler). Group comparison of quality measures was done using a Welch's
Introduction. Cephalomedullary nailing (CMN) is commonly used for unstable pertrochanteric fracture. CMN is relatively safe method although various complications can potentially occur needing revision surgery. Commonly used salvage procedures such as renailing, hemiarthroplasty, conservative treatment or total hip arthroplasty (THA) are viable alternatives. The aim was to investigate the rate of THA after CMN and evaluate the performance on conversion total hip arthroplasty (cTHA) after failure of CMN. Method. Collected data included patients from two orthopedic centers. Data consisted of all cTHAs after CMN between 2014-2020 and primary cementless THA operations between 2013-2023. Primary THA operations were treated as a control group where Oxford Hip Score (OHS) was the main compared variable. Result. From 2398 proximal femoral hip procedures 1667 CMN procedures were included. Altogether 46/1667 (2.8%) CMNs later received THA. Indications for THA after CMN failure were 13 (28.3%) cut-outs, nine (19.6%) cut-throughs, eight (17.4%) nail breakages, seven (15.2%) post traumatic arthrosis, seven (15.2%) nonunions, one (2.2%) malunion and one (2.2%) collum screw withdrawal. Mean (SD) time to complication after CMN operation is 5.9 (6.8) months. Mean (SD) time from nail procedure to THA was 10.4 (12.0) months. Total complication rate for cTHA after CMN was 17.4%. Reported complications were infection with seven (15.2%) cases and one (2.2%) nerve damage. Mean (SD) time to cTHA complication was 3.6 (6.1) months. One-sample
This study aimed to quantify self-reported outcomes and walking gait biomechanics in patients following primary and revision THA. The specific goals of this study were to investigate: (i) if primary and revision THA patients have comparable preoperative outcomes; and (2) if revision THA patients have worse postoperative outcomes than primary THA patients. Forty-three patients undergoing primary THA for osteoarthritis and 23 patients undergoing revision THA were recruited and followed longitudinally for their first 12 postoperative months. Reasons for revision were loosening (73%), dislocation (9%), and infection (18%). Patients completed the Hip dysfunction and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS), and underwent gait analysis preoperatively, and at 3 and 12 months postoperatively. A 10 camera motion analysis system (V5 Vantage, Vicon, UK) recorded marker trajectories (100 Hz) during walking at self- selected speeds. A generic lower-body musculoskeletal model (Gait2392) was scaled using principal component analysis [1] and the inverse kinematics tool in Opensim 3.3 was used to compute joint angles for the lower limbs in the sagittal plane. Independent samples
Introduction. The evaluation of treatment modalities for distal femur periprosthetic fractures (DFPF) post-total knee arthroplasty (TKA) has predominantly focused on functional and radiological outcomes in existing literature. This study aimed to comprehensively compare the functional and radiological efficacy of locking plate (LP) and retrograde intramedullary nail (IMN) treatments, while incorporating mortality rates. Method. Twenty patients (15 female, 5 male) with a minimum 24-month follow-up period, experiencing Lewis-Rorabeck type-2 DFPF after TKA were included. These patients underwent either LP (n=10) or IMN (n=10). The average follow-up duration was 48 months (range: 24–192). Treatment outcomes, including functional scores, alignment, union time, complications, and mortality rates, were assessed and compared between LP and IMN groups. Clinical examination findings pre-treatment and at final follow-up, along with two-way plain radiographs, were utilized. Statistical analyses comprised Student's
Introduction. Weight is a modifiable risk factor for osteoarthritis (OA) progression. Despite the emphasis on weight loss, data quantifying the changes seen in joint biomechanics are limited. Bariatric surgery patients experience rapid weight loss. This provides a suitable population to study changes in joint forces and function as weight changes. Method. 10 female patients undergoing gastric bypass or sleeve gastrectomy completed 3D walking gait analysis at a self-selected pace, pre- and 6 months post-surgery. Lower limb and torso kinematic data for 10 walking trials were collected using a Vicon motion capture system and kinetics using a Kistler force plate. An inverse kinematic model in Visual 3D allowed for no translation of the hip joint centre. 6 degrees of freedom were allowed at other joints. Data were analysed using JASP with a paired samples
Falls in adults are a major problem and can lead to injuries and death. In order to better understand falls and successful recoveries, identifying kinematics, kinetics, and muscle forces during recovery from loss of balance is crucial. To obtain reactive gait patterns, participants must be subjected to unexpected perturbations such as trips and slips. Previous researchers have reported kinetics recovery data following stumbling; however, the muscle force recovery patterns remain unknown. To better target exercises to reduce the risk of falls, we must first understand which muscles, their magnitude, and their coordination patterns, play a role in a successful recovery from a trip and a slip. Additionally, knowing the successful patterns of lower limb function can help with the diagnosis of faulty movements. A total of 20 healthy adults in their twenties with similar athletic backgrounds were perturbed on a split-belt treadmill using Computer-Assisted Rehabilitation Environment (Motkforce Link) at a preset speed of 1.1m/s. Two kinds of perturbations were administered: slip and trip. Slips were simulated by accelerating one belt, whereas trips were simulated by decelerating one belt. Both perturbations had similar intensity and only differed in the direction. Computational modeling was used to obtain lower-limb function during the compensatory step. SPM paired
For clinical movement analysis, optical marker-based motion capture is the gold standard. With the advancement of AI-driven computer vision, markerless motion capture (MMC) has emerged. Validity against the marker-based standard has only been examined for lightly-dressed subjects as required for marker placement. This pilot study investigates how different clothing affects the measurement of typical gait metrics. Gait tests at self-selected speed (4 km/h) were performed on a treadmill (Motek Grail), captured by 9 cameras (Qualisys Miqus, 720p, f=100Hz) and analyzed by a leading MMC application (Theia, Canada). A healthy subject (female, h=164cm, m=54kg) donned clothes between trials starting from lightly dressed (LD: bicycle tight, short-sleeved shirt), adding a short skirt (SS: hip occlusion) or a midi-skirt (MS: partial knee occlusion) or street wear (SW: jeans covering ankle, long-sleeved blouse), the lattern combined with a short jacket (SWJ) or a long coat (SWC). Gait parameters (mean±SD, t=10s) calculated (left leg, mid-stance) were ankle pronation (AP-M), knee flexion (KF-M), pelvic obliquity (PO-M) and trunk lateral lean (TL-M) representing clinically common metrics, different joints and anatomic planes. Four repetitions of the base style (LD) were compared to states of increased garment coverage using the
Recent studies on animal models focused on the effect of preserving tendon remnant of rotator cuff on tendon healing. A positive effect by combining tendon remnant preservation and small bone vents on the greater tuberosity in comparison with standard tendon-to-bone repair has been shown. The purpose of the present clinical study was to evaluate the efficacy of biologic augmentation of arthroscopic rotator cuff repair by maintaining tendon remnant on rotator cuff footprint combined with small bone vents of the greater tuberosity. A retrospective study was conducted. All patients who underwent arthroscopic rotator cuff repair associated with small bone vents (nanofractures) and tendon footprint preservation were considered eligible for the study. Inclusion criteria were: diagnosis of full-thickness rotator cuff tear as diagnosed at preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and confirmed at the time of surgery; minimum 24-month of follow-up and availability of post-operative MRI performed not earlier than 6 months after surgery. Exclusion criteria were: partial thickness tears, irreparable tears, capsulo-labral pathologies, calcific tendonitis, gleno-humeral osteoarthritis and/or previous surgery. Primary outcome was the ASES score. Secondary outcomes were: Quick-DASH and WORC scores, and structural integrity of repaired tendons by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) performed six months after surgery. A paired
Abstract. OBJECTIVE. Flattening of the talar dome is observed clinically in haemarthropathy as structural and functional changes advance but has not been quantified yet. In order to confirm clinical observation, and assess the degree of change, morphological measurements were derived from MR images. METHODS. Four measurements were taken, using ImageJ (1.52v), from sagittal MRI projections at three locations – medial, lateral and central: Trochlear Tali Arc Length (TaAL), Talar Height (TaH), Trochlear Tali Length (TaL), and Trochlear Tali Radius (TaR). These measurements were used to generate three ratios of interest: TaR:TaAL, TaAL:TaL, and TaL:TaH. With the hypothesis of a flattening of the talar dome with haemarthropathy, it was expected that TaR:TaAL and TaL:TaH should be greater for haemophilic ankles, and TaAL:TaL should be smaller. A total of 126 MR images (ethics: MEEC 18–022) were included to assess the difference in those ratios between non-diseased ankles (33 images from 11 volunteers) and haemophilic ankles (93 images from 8 patients’ ankles). Non-diseased control measurements were compared to literature to assess the capacity of doing measurements on MRI instead of radiographs or CT. RESULTS. Reasonable agreement was found between measurements on non-diseased ankles and those from literature, with greatest variance in TaAL. The medial talus demonstrated decreases in all dimensions with haemophilia (TaR=2.4%, TaL=14.7%, TaAL=19.5% and TaH=27.8%;
Introduction and Objective. Intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration is one of the major contributors to low back pain, the leading cause of disability worldwide. This multifactorial pathological process involves the degradation of the extracellular matrix, inflammation, and cell loss due to apoptosis and senescence. While the deterioration of the extracellular matrix and cell loss lead to structural collapse of the IVD, increased levels of inflammation result in innervation and the development of pain. Amongst the known regulators of inflammation, toll-like receptors (TLRs) and more specifically TLR-2 have been shown to be specifically relevant in IVD degeneration. As strong post-transcriptional regulators, microRNAs (miRNAs) and their dysregulation has been connected to multiple pathologies, including degenerative diseases such as osteoarthritis and IVD degeneration. However, the role of miRNAs in TLR signalling in the IVD is still poorly understood and was hence investigated in this study. Materials and Methods. Human Nucleus pulposus (hNP) and Annulus fibrosus (hAF) cells (n=5) were treated with the TLR-2/6 specific agonist PAM2CSK4 (100 ng/mL for 6 hours) in order to activate the TLR2 signalling pathway. After the activation both miRNA and mRNA were isolated, followed by next-generation sequencing and qPCR analysis of proinflammatory cytokines respectively. Furthermore, cell supernatants were used to analyze the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. TLR-2 knockdown (siRNA) cells were used as a control. Statistical analysis was conducted by performing Kolmogorov-Smirnov test and a two-tailed Student's
More than 250,000 people are suffering from Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) related injuries each year in the US, with a cost of $17–25K/patient. There is an unmet clinical demand for improving grafts/scaffolds to provide biological integration in addition to mechanical support. Currently, no data is available for the utilization of fibrous scaffolds with bimodal distribution for ACL regeneration. The novelty in this study is that it proposes for the first time to investigate the collagen fibril diameter distribution in healthy and injured bovine ACL tissue, and utilization of such structure for scaffold design. Objectives are 1) developing a bovine ACL tear model and measuring the collagen fibril diameter distribution of both healthy and injured ACL tissues, and 2) fabricating scaffolds to mimic the structural properties of healthy and injured ACL tissue. Bovine ACL tissues (1–3 years old) were harvested and characterized for their fibril diameter distribution using Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) and biomechanical properties under tension. The electrospun polycaprolactone (PCL) scaffolds were characterized using SEM and mechanical testing. Healthy and injured ACL fibril diameter, and that of PCL scaffolds representing healthy and injured ACL are compared using unpaired student
Targeted delivery of drugs is a major challenge in diseases such as infections and tumors. The aim of this study was to demonstrate that hydroxyapatite (HA) particles can act as a recruiting moiety for various bioactive molecules and as a proof-of-concept demonstrate that the affinity of drugs to hydroxyapatite can exert a biological effect. A bisphosphonate, zoledronic acid (ZA), was used as a model drug. Experiment 1 (ZA seeks HA): Calcium sulphate (CaS)/hydroxyapatite (HA) biomaterial pellets (diameter¸=5 mm, height=2 mm) were implanted in the abdominal muscle pouch of rats. After 2-weeks of implantation, a sub-cutaneous injection of 14C-ZA (0.1 mg/kg) was given. 24 h later, the animals were sacrificed and the uptake of ZA determined in the pellets using scintillation counting. Experiment 2 (Systemically administered ZA seeks HA and exerts a biological effect): A fenestrated implant was filled with the CaS/HA biomaterial and inserted in the proximal tibia of rats. 2-weeks post-op, a subcutaneous injection of ZA (0.1 mg/kg) was given. Animals were sacrificed at 6-weeks post-op. Empty implant was used as a control. Peri-implant bone formation was evaluated using different techniques such as micro-CT, mechanical testing and histology. Welch's