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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The pathomechanical etiology of post-traumatic osteoarthritis following intraarticular fractures

TLDR
This body of work has provided a novel framework for developing and testing new approaches to forestall PTOA following intra-articular fractures and provides objective biomechanical indices of injury severity and of chronic contact stress challenge to fractured joint surfaces.
Abstract
Many intra-articular fracture patients eventually experience significant functional deficits, pain, and stiffness from post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA). Over the last several decades, continued refinement of surgical reconstruction techniques has failed to markedly improve patient outcomes. New treatment paradigms are needed - ideally, bio/pharmaceutical. Progress in that direction has been impeded because the pathomechanical etiology of PTOA development is poorly understood. In particular, the relative roles and pathomechanisms of acute joint injury (from the initial trauma) versus chronic contact stress elevation (from residual incongruity) are unknown, primarily because there have been no objective methods for reliably quantifying either of these insult entities. Over the past decade, novel enabling technologies have been developed that provide objective biomechanical indices of injury severity and of chronic contact stress challenge to fractured joint surfaces. The severity of the initial joint injury is indexed primarily on the basis of the energy released in fracture, obtained from validated digital image analysis of CT scans. Chronic contact stress elevations are indexed by patient-specific finite element stress analysis, using models derived from post-reduction CT scans. These new measures, conceived in the laboratory, have been taken through the stage of validation, and then have been applied in studies of intra-articular fracture patients, to relate these biomechanical indices of cartilage insult to the incidence and severity of PTOA This body of work has provided a novel framework for developing and testing new approaches to forestall PTOA following intra-articular fractures.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Inflammation in joint injury and post-traumatic osteoarthritis

TL;DR: A vigorous inflammatory response occurs very early after joint injury but is then sustained at a lower level at the later phases, which should provide hope for the future of disease modification tin PTOA.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pasteurella multocida: from Zoonosis to Cellular Microbiology

TL;DR: Recent comparative genomics and molecular pathogenesis studies that have advanced the understanding of the multiple virulence mechanisms employed by Pasteurella species to establish acute and chronic infections are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Post-traumatic osteoarthritis: from mouse models to clinical trials

TL;DR: How the latest data on potential molecular targets for PTOA prevention and modification derived from studies in genetically modified mice are translated to humans is focused on, and the potential challenges to successful implementation of clinical trials of disease-modifying drugs for OA are identified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inflammatory Cytokines and Matrix Metalloproteinases in the Synovial Fluid After Intra-articular Ankle Fracture.

TL;DR: The data indicate that after intra-articular ankle fracture the SF exhibits a largely pro-inflammatory and extra-cellular matrix degrading environment similar to that described in idiopathic osteoarthritis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Injurious Loading of Articular Cartilage Compromises Chondrocyte Respiratory Function

TL;DR: To determine whether repeatedly overloading healthy cartilage disrupts mitochondrial function in a manner similar to that associated with osteoarthritis (OA) pathogenesis, mitochondrial function is monitored in mice with and without anterior cruciate ligament damage.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fractures of the acetabulum: accuracy of reduction and clinical results in patients managed operatively within three weeks after the injury.

TL;DR: Findings indicate that in many patients who have a complex acetabular fracture the hip joint can be preserved and post-traumatic osteoarthrosis can be avoided if an anatomical reduction is achieved.
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Posttraumatic osteoarthritis: a first estimate of incidence, prevalence, and burden of disease.

TL;DR: A population-based estimate was formulated, based on one large institution's experience in terms of its fraction of patients with OA presenting to lower-extremity adult reconstructive clinics with Oa of posttraumatic origin, that approximately 12% of the overall prevalence of symptomatic OA is attributable to posttraumatic OA of the hip, knee, or ankle.
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Bacteriologic Analysis of Infected Dog and Cat Bites

TL;DR: Infected dog and cat bites have a complex microbiologic mix that usually includes pasteurella species but may also include many other organisms not routinely identified by clinical microbiology laboratories and not previously recognized as bite-wound pathogens.
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Factors affecting functional outcome of displaced intra-articular distal radius fractures

TL;DR: The degree to which articular step-off, gap between fragments, and radial shortening are improved by surgery is strongly correlated with improved outcome, even when the results are corrected for severity of initial injury, whereas correction of radial tilt or dorsal tilt did not correlate withImproved outcome.
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Cervical pedicle screws versus lateral mass screws. Anatomic feasibility and biomechanical comparison.

TL;DR: Cervical pedicle screws demonstrated a significantly higher resistance to pull-out forces than did lateral mass screws, and the variability in pedicle morphometry and orientation requires careful preoperative assessment to determine the suitability of pedicle screw insertion.
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