| Literature DB >> 31467650 |
M Duarte-Silva1,2,3, F Guerra-Pinto1,2,3, N Camelo-Barbosa2, P Beja-da-Costa3.
Abstract
Meniscectomy is the most common surgery in orthopaedics. The absence of meniscal tissue might be related to irreversible damage to the articular cartilage. Meniscal replacement is a tissue-engineering technique for post-meniscectomy syndrome. Its success depends on the implant integration which was vastly proven in animal model studies. Histological evidence is hard to obtain in humans due to ethical issues. We report a clinical case in which a collagen scaffold meniscal implant was harvested six months after implantation due to mechanical failure. Histological analysis was performed revealing vascularisation not only of the peripheral attachment of the implant but also on the anterior horn. These morphologic findings demonstrate that this implant allows the colonisation by precursor cells and vessels, leading to the formation of a fully functional tissue. This present report is one of the few independent reports of scaffold biological integration in the literature.Entities:
Keywords: biological integration; collagen scaffold; meniscal implant
Year: 2019 PMID: 31467650 PMCID: PMC6702983 DOI: 10.5704/MOJ.1907.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malays Orthop J ISSN: 1985-2533
Fig. 1a:Arthroscopic image showing the integration of the meniscal implant in its body and anterior horn.
Fig. 2:Excised fragment from the ruptured meniscal implant, and its lines of sample cut for histology analysis.
Fig. 3a:Hematoxilin-Eosin. Microscopic reconstruction. Please note the triangular shape, the presence of horizontal dark red lines and the filling with cells and matrix throughout the implant. The most important finding were the blood vessels in the periphery of the implant. The collagen fibers are present throughout the whole implant, but are less dense in the most peripheral area, attached to the meniscal rim.
Fig. 3b:Hematoxilin-Eosin x40. Tip of the implant. Fibrochondrocytes filling the spaces between the collagen mesh (black arrow). Outer growth of fibrochondroid tissue covering and making the implant longer (white arrow) can also be observed.
Fig. 3c:Hematoxilin-Eosin x 200. Blood vessels in the periphery of the implant. Not only were there fibro-chondrocytes filling the spaces between the collagen mesh, but also these cells escaped the mesh, covering it and making it longer. The vessels (red arrows) and the fibrochondrocytes (blue arrow) are seen.