Ramme Austin J, Lendhey Matin S, Strauss Eric J, Kennedy Oran D
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York.
Department of Anatomy, The Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.
J Knee Surg. 2018 Jan;31(1):43-49. doi: 10.1055/s-0037-1600088. Epub 2017 Mar 29.
Small animal models are critical for studies of sports-related knee injury and disease such as posttraumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) following anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) rupture. In such models, ACL damage can be achieved by surgical transection or, using a more recent innovation, by noninvasive biomechanical means. Whether these approaches differentially alter normal mechanics is unknown. Furthermore, while surgical reconstruction of ruptured ACL can greatly improve joint stability, its effect on PTOA development is also unclear. Our primary purpose was to characterize rodent knee joint mechanics in two models of ACL rupture using a novel quantitative laxity mechanical test. Our secondary aim was to characterize a new reconstruction technique using autograft tail tendon, and to assess its effect on joint mechanics. Our hypothesis was that surgical ACL transection would have a greater effect on joint mechanics. A total of 24 rat knee specimens underwent surgical or biomechanical ACL rupture and were stabilized using a new reconstruction technique using autograft tail tendon. Joint mechanics were assessed three times; preinjury, postinjury, and again after reconstruction, using quantitative joint laxity testing. Primary test readouts were maximum anteroposterior (AP) laxity, loading curve slope, and energy absorption. Student's -tests were performed to identify intragroup differences. All surgical transections were completed successfully; maximum load in the biomechanical model was 67 ± 7.7 N, with a coefficient of variation of 11.43%. Surgical transection caused increased AP laxity, while biomechanical injury nonsignificantly increased this parameter. In both cases, these changes recovered to baseline by reconstruction. Loading curve slope was reduced in both models and was also returned to baseline by repair. Energy absorption followed the same pattern except it remained significantly different from baseline postreconstruction in the surgical group. This study supports our hypothesis knee joint mechanics is differentially affected by injury mechanism in a small animal model. We also report a novel reconstruction technique in this model, using autograft tail tendon.
小动物模型对于研究与运动相关的膝关节损伤和疾病至关重要,例如前交叉韧带(ACL)断裂后的创伤后骨关节炎(PTOA)。在这类模型中,ACL损伤可以通过手术横断来实现,或者采用一项更新的创新方法,即通过非侵入性生物力学手段来实现。这些方法是否会不同程度地改变正常力学状态尚不清楚。此外,虽然对断裂的ACL进行手术重建可以大大提高关节稳定性,但其对PTOA发展的影响也不明确。我们的主要目的是使用一种新型定量松弛力学测试,来描述两种ACL断裂模型中啮齿动物膝关节的力学特征。我们的次要目标是描述一种使用自体尾腱的新重建技术,并评估其对关节力学的影响。我们的假设是手术横断ACL对关节力学的影响会更大。共有24个大鼠膝关节标本接受了手术或生物力学性ACL断裂,并使用一种使用自体尾腱的新重建技术进行固定。关节力学在三个时间点进行评估:损伤前、损伤后以及重建后,采用定量关节松弛测试。主要测试指标为最大前后(AP)松弛度、负荷曲线斜率和能量吸收。进行Student's -检验以确定组内差异。所有手术横断均成功完成;生物力学模型中的最大负荷为67±7.7 N,变异系数为11.43%。手术横断导致AP松弛度增加,而生物力学损伤使该参数无显著增加。在两种情况下,这些变化通过重建恢复到基线水平。两个模型中的负荷曲线斜率均降低,并且通过修复也恢复到基线水平。能量吸收遵循相同模式,只是在手术组中重建后仍与基线存在显著差异。本研究支持我们的假设,即在小动物模型中,膝关节力学受损伤机制的影响存在差异。我们还报告了在该模型中使用自体尾腱的一种新型重建技术。