Publication | Closed Access
Spontaneous Repair of Full-Thickness Defects of Articular Cartilage in a Goat Model
365
Citations
10
References
2001
Year
As surgeons apply new reparative procedures to larger areas of full-thickness articular cartilage loss, we believe that it is important to consider the potential deleterious effects of a "zone of influence" secondary to the creation of a large defect in the subchondral bone. When biologic and synthetic matrices with or without cells or bioactive factors are placed into surgically created osseous defects, the osseous walls serve as shoulders to protect and stabilize the preliminary repair process. It is important to protect the repair process until biologic incorporation occurs and the chondrogenic switch turns the cells on to synthesize an articular-cartilage-like matrix. It takes a varying period of time to fill a large, surgically created bone defect underlying a chondral surface. The repair of such a defect requires bone synthesis and the reestablishment of a subchondral plate with a tidemark transition to the new overlying articular surface. The prevention of secondary changes in the surrounding bone and articular cartilage and the durability of the new reparative tissue making up the articulating surface are issues that must be addressed in future studies.
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