Durable bone fixation of uncemented porous-coated acetabular cups can be observed at a long-term, however, polyethylene (PE) wear and osteolysis may affect survivorship. Accurate wear measurements correlated with clinical data may offer unique research information of clinical interest about this highly debated issue. We assessed the clinical and radiological outcome of a single uncemented total hip replacement (THR) system after twenty years analysing polyethylene wear and the appearance of osteolysis.Introduction
Objetive
Implant-related infection is one of the most devastating complications in orthopaedic surgery. Many surface and/or material modifications have been developed in order to minimise this problem; however, most of the We describe a method for the study of bacterial adherence in the presence of preosteoblastic cells. For this purpose we mixed different concentrations of bacterial cells from collection and clinical strains of staphylococci isolated from implant-related infections with preosteoblastic cells, and analysed the minimal concentration of bacteria able to colonise the surface of the material with image analysis.Objectives
Methods
Definitive proof is lacking on mesenchymal stem cell (MSCs) cellular therapy to regenerate bone if biological potential is insufficient. High number of MSCs after GMP expansion may solve the progenitor insufficiency at the injury but clinical trials are pending. A prospective, multicenter, multinational Phase I/IIa interventional clinical trial was designed under the EU-FP7 REBORNE Project to evaluate safety and early efficacy of autologous expanded MSCs loaded on biomaterial at the fracture site in diaphyseal and/or metaphysodiaphyseal fractures (femur, tibia, humerus) nonunions. The trial included 30 recruited patients among 5 European centres in France, Spain, Germany, and Italy. Safety endpoints (local and general complication rate) and secondary endpoints for early efficacy (number of patients with clinically and radiologically proven bone healing at 12 and 24 weeks) were established. Cultured MSCs from autologous bone marrow, expanded under GMP protocol was the Investigational Medicinal Product, standardised in the participating countries confirming equivalent cell production in all the contributing GMP facilities. Cells were mixed with CE-marked biphasic calcium phosphate biomaterial in the surgical setting, at an implanted dose of 20−106 cells per cc of biomaterial (total 10cc per case) in a single administration, after debridement of the nonunion.Background
Methods
Description of an original in vitro protocol for assessing combined bacteria and cell competitive adherence on the surface of biomaterials of medical interest Biomaterial-related infections are a major clinical problem. The pathogenesis of this syndrome has been described as a competitive adherence between bacteria and human cells in the so-called “race for the surface” theory. The aim of this study is to develop an Summary Statement
Objectives