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Image-Guided Techniques Improve the Short-Term Outcome of Autologous Osteochondral Cartilage Repair Surgeries: An Animal Trial

OBJECTIVE: Autologous osteochondral cartilage repair is a valuable reconstruction option for cartilage defects, but the accuracy to harvest and deliver osteochondral grafts remains problematic. We investigated whether image-guided methods (optically guided and template guided) can improve the outcom...

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Autores principales: Kunz, Manuela, Devlin, Steven M., Hurtig, Mark B., Waldman, Stephen D., Rudan, John F., Bardana, Davide D., Stewart, A. James
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4297103/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26069658
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1947603512470683
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author Kunz, Manuela
Devlin, Steven M.
Hurtig, Mark B.
Waldman, Stephen D.
Rudan, John F.
Bardana, Davide D.
Stewart, A. James
author_facet Kunz, Manuela
Devlin, Steven M.
Hurtig, Mark B.
Waldman, Stephen D.
Rudan, John F.
Bardana, Davide D.
Stewart, A. James
author_sort Kunz, Manuela
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Autologous osteochondral cartilage repair is a valuable reconstruction option for cartilage defects, but the accuracy to harvest and deliver osteochondral grafts remains problematic. We investigated whether image-guided methods (optically guided and template guided) can improve the outcome of these procedures. DESIGN: Fifteen sheep were operated to create traumatic chondral injuries in each knee. After 4 months, the chondral defect in one knee was repaired using (a) conventional approach, (b) optically guided method, or (c) template-guided method. For both image-guided groups, harvest and delivery sites were preoperatively planned using custom-made software. During optically guided surgery, instrument position and orientation were tracked and superimposed onto the surgical plan. For the template-guided group, plastic templates were manufactured to allow an exact fit between template and the joint anatomy. Cylindrical holes within the template guided surgical tools according to the plan. Three months postsurgery, both knees were harvested and computed tomography scans were used to compare the reconstructed versus the native pre-injury joint surfaces. For each repaired defect, macroscopic (International Cartilage Repair Society [ICRS]) and histological repair (ICRS II) scores were assessed. RESULTS: Three months after repair surgery, both image-guided surgical approaches resulted in significantly better histology scores compared with the conventional approach (improvement by 55%, P < 0.02). Interestingly, there were no significant differences found in cartilage surface reconstruction and macroscopic scores between the image-guided and the conventional surgeries.
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spelling pubmed-42971032015-06-11 Image-Guided Techniques Improve the Short-Term Outcome of Autologous Osteochondral Cartilage Repair Surgeries: An Animal Trial Kunz, Manuela Devlin, Steven M. Hurtig, Mark B. Waldman, Stephen D. Rudan, John F. Bardana, Davide D. Stewart, A. James Cartilage Article OBJECTIVE: Autologous osteochondral cartilage repair is a valuable reconstruction option for cartilage defects, but the accuracy to harvest and deliver osteochondral grafts remains problematic. We investigated whether image-guided methods (optically guided and template guided) can improve the outcome of these procedures. DESIGN: Fifteen sheep were operated to create traumatic chondral injuries in each knee. After 4 months, the chondral defect in one knee was repaired using (a) conventional approach, (b) optically guided method, or (c) template-guided method. For both image-guided groups, harvest and delivery sites were preoperatively planned using custom-made software. During optically guided surgery, instrument position and orientation were tracked and superimposed onto the surgical plan. For the template-guided group, plastic templates were manufactured to allow an exact fit between template and the joint anatomy. Cylindrical holes within the template guided surgical tools according to the plan. Three months postsurgery, both knees were harvested and computed tomography scans were used to compare the reconstructed versus the native pre-injury joint surfaces. For each repaired defect, macroscopic (International Cartilage Repair Society [ICRS]) and histological repair (ICRS II) scores were assessed. RESULTS: Three months after repair surgery, both image-guided surgical approaches resulted in significantly better histology scores compared with the conventional approach (improvement by 55%, P < 0.02). Interestingly, there were no significant differences found in cartilage surface reconstruction and macroscopic scores between the image-guided and the conventional surgeries. SAGE Publications 2013-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4297103/ /pubmed/26069658 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1947603512470683 Text en © The Author(s) 2012
spellingShingle Article
Kunz, Manuela
Devlin, Steven M.
Hurtig, Mark B.
Waldman, Stephen D.
Rudan, John F.
Bardana, Davide D.
Stewart, A. James
Image-Guided Techniques Improve the Short-Term Outcome of Autologous Osteochondral Cartilage Repair Surgeries: An Animal Trial
title Image-Guided Techniques Improve the Short-Term Outcome of Autologous Osteochondral Cartilage Repair Surgeries: An Animal Trial
title_full Image-Guided Techniques Improve the Short-Term Outcome of Autologous Osteochondral Cartilage Repair Surgeries: An Animal Trial
title_fullStr Image-Guided Techniques Improve the Short-Term Outcome of Autologous Osteochondral Cartilage Repair Surgeries: An Animal Trial
title_full_unstemmed Image-Guided Techniques Improve the Short-Term Outcome of Autologous Osteochondral Cartilage Repair Surgeries: An Animal Trial
title_short Image-Guided Techniques Improve the Short-Term Outcome of Autologous Osteochondral Cartilage Repair Surgeries: An Animal Trial
title_sort image-guided techniques improve the short-term outcome of autologous osteochondral cartilage repair surgeries: an animal trial
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4297103/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26069658
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1947603512470683
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