| Literature DB >> 23999650 |
Patrycja Mickiewicz1, Marcin Binkowski, Henryk Bursig, Zygmunt Wróbel.
Abstract
Nowadays, there are four types of meniscal allografts known: fresh, cryopreserved, deep-frozen and lyophilized ones but only two of them are widely used in clinical practice. Use of different types of meniscal allografts still remains controversial due to preparation method, their biomechanical properties as well as cost which is connected with processing and storage. The main aim of this review is to present the current status of knowledge concerning meniscal allograft preservation and sterilization, especially the advantages and disadvantages of each method. Authors wanted to show a broad spectrum of methods used and conceptions presented by other authors. The second aim is to gather available information about meniscal preservation and sterilization methods in one paper. Deep-frozen and cryopreserved meniscal allografts are the most frequently used ones in the clinical practice. The use of fresh grafts stays controversial but also has many followers. Lyophilized grafts in turn are not applied at present due to some serious drawbacks including reduction of tensile strength, poor rehydration, graft shrinkage and post-transplantation joint effusion as well as increased risk of meniscal size reduction. An application of sterilizing agents make the meniscal allograft free from the bacteria and viruses, but also it may cause serious structure changes. Therefore, choosing just one ideal method of meniscal allograft preservation and sterilization is complicated and should be based on broad knowledge and experience of surgeon performing the transplantation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23999650 PMCID: PMC4145200 DOI: 10.1007/s10561-013-9396-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Tissue Bank ISSN: 1389-9333 Impact factor: 1.522
Fig. 1Cadaveric right knee—top view. 1 Patella, 2 lateral meniscus, 3 medial meniscus
Fig. 2Tibial plateau without medial meniscus
Fig. 3Lateral meniscus fixed with its anterior horn to the tibial plateau
Fig. 4Medial and lateral menisci in plastic bags before γ-irradiation
Fig. 5Lateral deep-frozen meniscus in operating theater. Anterior horn is marked
Characteristic of meniscal preservation methods
| Type of graft | Preparation technique | Cells viability | Immunogenicity | Risk of disease transmission | Storage | Sterilization | Biomechanical properties | Cost | Usage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh | Quite complicated and demanding | Yes | Yes | Potentially high | In incubators, expensive | No | Excellent | Expensive | Rarely |
| Fresh-frozen | Simple | No | No | Low | at −80 °C | Yes | Controversial | Quite cheap | Often |
| Cryopreserved | Quite demanding | Yes | Yes | Potentially exist | at −196 °C | No | Controversial | Quite expensive | Quite often |
| Lyophilized | Complicated | No | No | Low | Unlimited | Yes | Poor | Quite expensive | No longer |