Literature DB >> 33241575

Tibial cartilage, subchondral bone plate and trabecular bone microarchitecture in varus- and valgus-osteoarthritis versus controls.

Sophie Rapagna1, Bryant C Roberts1,2, Lucian B Solomon3,4, Karen J Reynolds1, Dominic Thewlis3, Egon Perilli1.   

Abstract

This preliminary study quantified tibia cartilage thickness (Cart.Th), subchondral bone plate thickness (SBPl.Th) and subchondral trabecular bone (STB) microarchitecture in subjects with varus- or valgus- malaligned knees diagnosed with end-stage knee osteoarthritis (OA) and compared them to controls (non-OA). Tibial plateaus from 25 subjects with knee-OA (undergoing knee arthroplasty) and 15 cadavers (controls) were micro-CT scanned (17 µm/voxel). Joint alignment was classified radiographically for OA subjects (varus-aligned n = 18, valgus-aligned n = 7). Cart.Th, SBPl.Th, STB bone volume fraction (BV/TV) and their medial-to-lateral ratios were analyzed in anteromedial, anterolateral, posteromedial and posterolateral subregions. Varus-OA and valgus-OA were compared to controls. Compared to controls (1.19-1.54 mm), Cart.Th in varus-OA was significantly lower anteromedially (0.58 mm, -59%) and higher laterally (2.19-2.47 mm, +60-63%); in valgus-OA, Cart.Th was significantly higher posteromedially (1.86 mm, +56%). Control medial-to-lateral Cart.Th ratios were around unity (0.8-1.1), in varus-OA significantly below (0.2-0.6) and in valgus-OA slightly above (1.0-1.3) controls. SBPl.Th and BV/TV were significantly higher medially in varus-OA (0.58-0.72 mm and 37-44%, respectively) and laterally in valgus-OA (0.60-0.61 mm and 32-37%), compared to controls (0.26-0.47 mm and 18-37%). In varus-OA, the medial-to-lateral SBPl.Th and BV/TV ratios were above unity (1.4-2.4) and controls (0.8-2.1); in valgus-OA they were closer to unity (0.8-1.1) and below controls. Varus- and valgus-OA tibia differ significantly from controls in Cart.Th, SBPl.Th and STB microarchitecture depending on joint alignment, suggesting structural changes in OA may reflect differences in medial-to-lateral load distribution upon the tibial plateau. Here we identified an inverse relationship between cartilage thickness and underlying subchondral bone, suggesting a whole-joint response in OA to daily stimuli.
© 2020 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bone microarchitecture; cartilage; knee osteoarthritis; micro-CT; tibial plateau

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33241575     DOI: 10.1002/jor.24914

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Orthop Res        ISSN: 0736-0266            Impact factor:   3.494


  3 in total

1.  Ontogenetic Patterning of Human Subchondral Bone Microarchitecture in the Proximal Tibia.

Authors:  Jesse R Goliath; James H Gosman; Sam D Stout; Timothy M Ryan
Journal:  Biology (Basel)       Date:  2022-07-01

2.  Medial tibial plateau sustaining higher physiological stress than the lateral plateau: based on 3D printing and finite element method.

Authors:  Liqin Zheng; Yuexing Dai; Yongze Zheng; Xingpeng He; Minhui Wu; Desheng Zheng; ChiHung Li; Yueguang Fan; Ziling Lin
Journal:  Biomed Eng Online       Date:  2022-09-16       Impact factor: 3.903

3.  Investigating the Microchannel Architectures Inside the Subchondral Bone in Relation to Estimated Hip Reaction Forces on the Human Femoral Head.

Authors:  Shahed Taheri; Takashi Yoshida; Kai O Böker; Robert H Foerster; Lina Jochim; Anna Lena Flux; Birgit Grosskopf; Wolfgang Lehmann; Arndt Friedrich Schilling
Journal:  Calcif Tissue Int       Date:  2021-05-22       Impact factor: 4.333

  3 in total

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