header advert
Results 1 - 5 of 5
Results per page:
Applied filters
Include Proceedings
Dates
Year From

Year To
Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 60 - 60
1 Jul 2014
James R Hogan M Balian G Chhabra A Laurencin C
Full Access

Summary Statement

A resorbable and biocompatible polymer-based scaffold was used for the proliferation and delivery of adipose derived stromal cells, as well as delivery of a cell growth/differentiation promoting factor for improved tendon defect regeneration.

Introduction

Surgeons perform thousands of direct tendon repairs annually. Repaired tendons fail to return to normal function following injury, and thus require continued efforts to improve patient outcomes. The ability to produce regenerate tendon tissue with properties equal to pre-injured tendon could lead to improved treatment outcomes. The aim of this study was to investigate in vivo tendon regeneration using a biodegradable polymer for the delivery of adipose derived stromal cells (ADSCs) and a polypeptide, growth/differentiation factor-5/(GDF-5), in a tendon gap model.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_VIII | Pages 59 - 59
1 Mar 2012
Cui F Wang X Dighe A Balian G Cui Q
Full Access

Introduction

Enhanced angiogenesis and osteogenesis may provide new strategies for the treatment of osteonecrosis.

Methods

Synergistic effects of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and bone morphogenetic protein - 6 (BMP-6) on in vitro osteogenic differentiation and in vivo ectopic bone formation mediated by a cloned mouse bone marrow stromal cell line, D1, previously isolated from Balb/c mice in our laboratory, were determined.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_VIII | Pages 56 - 56
1 Mar 2012
Zawodny SR Wang X Balian G Cui Q
Full Access

Introduction

Osteonecrosis of the femoral head is a devastating disease in young patients and remains a challenge for clinicians and researchers alike. To increase understanding of the disease and produce effective treatments that preserve a patient's native hip, an animal model that mimics the disease process in humans, including collapse of the femoral head, is essential. Our goal was to create such a bipedal model by surgically inducing osteonecrosis in the femoral heads of chickens.

Methods

A lateral approach to the proximal femur was used to access the hip, dislocate the femoral head, and sever the periosteal network of blood vessels. At 4, 8, 12, and 20 weeks after surgery, both the left (experimental) and right (control) femoral heads were harvested from 6 chickens for micro-CT and histological analysis.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 88-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 303 - 303
1 May 2006
Cui Q Wang Y Mulhall K Saleh K Wang G Balian G
Full Access

Introduction: Alcohol can induce osteoporosis and osteonecrosis. Studies have demonstrated that alcohol contributed to abnormal lipid metabolism in cells in bone marrow but the mechanisms have not been defined. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of alcohol on the differentiation of pluripotential cells cloned from bone marrow.

Materials and Methods: The cells were maintained in culture and treated with either increasing concentrations of ethanol (0.09, 0.15, and 0.21 mol/L) or without alcohol to serve as controls. Morphologic features of the cells were monitored using a phase-contrast microscope. Alkaline phosphatase activity was determined using a colorimetric assay. Gene expression of adipogenesis [422 (aP2), PPAR y] and osteogenesis (osteocalcin) was evaluated using the Northern blot technique and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). ANOVA was used for statistical analysis.

Results: The cells treated with ethanol started to accumulate triglyceride vesicles at Day 7; the number of adipocytes and the percentage of the area that contained the cells with fat vesicles increased significantly; and the level of alkaline phosphatase activity diminished with longer durations of exposure and with higher concentrations of ethanol. Analysis of gene expression showed diminished expression of osteocalcin without a significant increase in the expression of the fat cell specific gene, 422 (aP2), and PPAR y, in cells treated with ethanol. This suggested that adipogenesis may occur at a point downstream in the fatty acid metabolism pathway.

Discussion: Alcohol induces bone marrow fatty changes in patients and in animal models contributing to osteoporosis and osteonecrosis. This study demonstrated that alcohol treatment decreased osteogenesis while enhancing adipogenesis by bone marrow stromal cells, which may be one of the mechanisms leading to osteoporosis and osteonecrosis. Inhibition of adipogenesis may lead to the prevention of the disease.

Clinical relevance: This is a novel finding that alcohol induces adipogenesis in a cloned bone marrow stromal cell. The results explain the clinical observation that there is increased adipogenesis in alcohol-induced osteoporosis and osteonecrosis.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 88-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 306 - 306
1 May 2006
Cui Q Azer N Saleh K Wang G Balian G
Full Access

Introduction: Treatment of osteonecrosis continues to be a challenging problem in orthopedic practice. Arthroplasty is generally successful but long-term results are inferior especially in young adults. Alternative treatments such as core decompression and trap-door procedures provide only temporary benefits and need much improvement. The replacement of necrotic bone to promote osteogenesis and angiogenesis and healing subchondral bone are future approaches. Autogenous cancellous bone is the preferred graft material but its supply is limited. Allografts are useful but not as desirable as autografts. Substitutes for bone grafts have been actively researched but few are available currently. In this study, we have attempted to use genetically engineered bone marrow stem cells in order to enhance the healing of a bone defect in a mouse model.

Materials and Methods: A bone marrow stem cell was cloned from Balb/c mice and transfected with LacZ and neomycin resistance genes. The cells were cultured for 7 to 10 days and both the osteoblastic and angiogenic properties of the cells were examined using Northern blots to detect osteocalcin and VEGF gene expression. The cells were also analyzed for alkaline phosphatase activity to demonstrate the osteoblastic phenotype of the cells. A suspension containing 2 x 107 cells/ml phosphate buffered solution was prepared for cell transplantation. A total of forty-eight, 8-week old Balb/c mice were used in this study. A 1.2 mm defect was created bilaterally with an electric drill in the femurs of 24 mice to mimic the core decompression and trap-door procedures. 2 x 106 cells were transplanted into each defect of the right femur while the left femur served as a control trap-door defect which was injected with PBS but without cells. An equal number of cells were injected either at subcutaneous sites, in the hindquarter muscles, or into the renal capsule (8 mice in each site) to evaluate ossification at ectopic sites. Animals were sacrificed at 2, 4, 6 and 8 weeks. Defect repair was evaluated radiographically and the contribution to osteogenesis by transplanted cells was studied histomorphometrically using tissue sections stained with X-gal as well as biochemically on DNA extracts using primers for the neomycin resistance gene.

Results: Radiopaque tissue appeared two weeks after the cells were transplanted into bone defects, muscle, subcutaneous sites, and the renal capsule. Histological analysis demonstrated that these tissues consist of newly formed bone from transplanted cells that stained positively with X-gal and contained neo DNA. The repair tissue did not contain cartilaginous areas indicating that ossification surrounding the D1-BAG cells was not through the endochondral process. At four weeks, 4 of 6 femora showed a defect that was filled with new bone. At 6 weeks, all of the defects (6 of 6) contained fully restored bone. However, in the control side that was injected with PBS (no cells) only 2 of 6 at 4 weeks, 3 of 6 at 6 weeks, and 5 of 6 at 8 weeks showed complete repair. All histological sections of bone defects (n = 24) were examined histomorphometrically using a computerized image analysis system. Transplantation of marrow stem cells into bone defects produced more bone at an earlier time point than controls and, the process of enhanced ossification continued throughout the healing process.

Discussion: The cloned bone marrow stem cell can directly form bone after transplantation into bone defects and into ectopic sites, indicating that the in vitro expanded bone marrow stem cells can serve as a grafting material to enhance healing of bone defects and the treatment of osteonecrosis. In addition, this study demonstrates that genetic labelling is a useful tool in studies of cell differentiation in vivo and that bone marrow stem cells may be useful as a carrier of genetically-engineered factors in the treatment of skeletal diseases.