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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 3 - 3
1 Mar 2021
Ge S Hadidi L Comeau-Gauthier M Ramirez-GarciaLuna J Merle G Harvey E
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Fracture non-union can be as high as 20% in certain clinical scenarios and has a high associated socioeconomic burden. Boron has been shown to regulate the Wnt/β-catenin pathway in other bodily processes. However, this pathway is also critical for bone healing. Here we aim to demonstrate that the local delivery of boric acid can accelerate bone healing, as well as to elucidate how boric acid, via the regulationtheWnt/β-catenin pathway, impacts theosteogenic response of bone-derived osteoclasts and osteoblasts during each phase of bone repair.

Bilateral femoral cortical defects were created in 32 skeletally mature C57 mice. On the experimental side, boric acid (8mg/kg concentration) was injected locally at the defect site whereas on the control side, saline was used. Mice were euthanized at 7, 14, and 28 days. MicroCT was used to quantify bone regeneration at the defect. Histological staining for ALP and TRAP was used to quantify osteoblast and osteoclast activity respectively. Immunohistochemical antibodies, β-catenin and CD34 were used to quantify active β-catenin levels and angiogenesis respectively. Sclerostin and GSK3β were also quantified and are both inhibitors of the wnt signaling pathway via degradation and inactivation of β-catenin.

The boron group exhibited higher bone volume and trabecular thickness at the defect site by 28 days on microCT. ALP activity was significantly higher in boron group at 7 days whereas boron had no effect on TRAP activity. Additionally, CD34 staining revealed increased angiogenesis at 14 days in boron treated groups. β-catenin activity on immunohistochemistry was significantly higher in the boron group at 7 days, GSK3β was significantly higher in the boron group at 14 days and Sclerostin was significantly higher in the boron group at 28 days.

Boron appears to increase osteoblast activity at the earlier phases of healing. The corresponding early increase in β-catenin along with ALP likely supports that boron increases osteoblast activity via the wnt/β-catenin pathway. Increased angiogenesis at 14 days could be a separate mechanism increasing bone formation independent of wnt/β-catenin activation. Neither GSK3β or Sclerostin levels correlated with β-catenin activity therefore boron likely increases β-catenin through a mechanism independent of both GSK3β and Sclerostin. The addition of this inexpensive and widely available ion could potentially become a non-invasive, cost-effective treatment modality to augment fracture healing and decrease non-union rates in high risk patients.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 20 - 20
1 Jul 2020
Ge S Barimani B Epure L Aoude A Luo L Volesky M Chaytor RE
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Recent innovations in total ankle replacement (TAR) have led to improvements in implant survivorship, accuracy of component positioning and sizing, and patient outcomes. CT-generated pre-operative plans and cutting guides show promising results in terms of placement enhancement and reproducibility in clinical studies. The purpose of this study was to determine the accuracy of 1) implant sizes used and 2) alignment corrections obtained intraoperatively using the cutting guides provided, compared to what was predicted in the CT generated pre-operative plans.

This is a retrospective study looking at 36 patients who underwent total ankle arthroplasty using a CT generated pre-operative planning system between July 2015 and December 2017. Personalized pre-operative planning data was obtained from the implant company. Two evaluators took measurements of the angle corrected using pre- and post-operative weight bearing ankle AP X-rays. All patients had a minimum three-month follow-up with weightbearing postoperative radiographs. The actual correction calculated from the radiographic assessment was compared with the predicted angles obtained from pre-operative plans. The predicted and predicted alternative component sizes and actual sizes used were also compared. If either a predicted or predicted alternative size was implanted, we considered it to be accurate.

Average age for all patients was 64 years (range 40–83), with a body mass index of 28.2 ± 5.6. All surgeries were performed by two foot and ankle surgeons. The average total surgical time was 110 ± 23 minutes. Pre-operative alignment ranged from 36.7 degrees valgus to 20 degrees varus. Average predicted coronal alignment correction was 0.8 degrees varus ± 9.3 degrees (range, 18.2 degrees valgus to 29 degrees varus) and average correction obtained was 2.1 degrees valgus ± 11.1 degrees. Average post-op alignment was consistently within 5 degrees of neutral. There were no significant differences between the predicted alignments and the postoperative weightbearing alignments. The predicted tibia implant size was accurate in all cases. The predicted sizes were less accurate for talar implants and predicted the actual talar implant size used in 66% of cases. In all cases of predicted talar size mismatch, surgical plans predicted 1 implant size larger than used.

Preliminary analyses of our data is comparable to previous studies looking at similar outcomes. However, our study had higher pre-operative deformities. Despite that, post-op alignments were consistently within 5 degress of neutral with no significant difference between the predicted and actual corrections. Tibial implant sizes are highly accurate while talar implant sizes had a trend of being one size smaller than predicted. Moreover, this effect seems to be more pronounced in the earlier cases likely reflective of increasing surgeon comfort with the implant with each subsequent case. These results confirm that pre-operative cutting guides are indeed helpful in intra-operative implant selection and positioning, however, there is still some room for innovation.