Bogoch E, Gschwend N, Rahn B, Moran E, Perren S
Department of Surgery, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Orthop Res. 1993 Mar;11(2):292-8. doi: 10.1002/jor.1100110217.
With use of the intravital bone label calcein, we previously identified, by histomorphometry, greatly increased new bone formation and juxtaarticular osteopenia (a high turnover state) in carrageenan-induced experimental inflammatory arthritis of the knee in rabbits. In Part I of this paper, we showed that a large increase in new bone formation after a stable incomplete distal femoral condylar osteotomy of normal bone in the rabbit does not increase bone volume (BV) in normal tissue adjacent to the osteotomy (zone 1). In this study, we performed an osteotomy of bone made osteopenic by experimental inflammatory arthritis. After 4 weeks of healing, we examined new bone formation and BV in five zones around the osteotomy. In zone 0 (the osteotomy gap), new bone formation filled the gap to normal BV, as we found for the normal/osteotomy group. In zone 1 (adjacent to but excluding the osteotomy gap), we found greatly increased new bone formation and a return to normal BV, increased from the osteopenic level induced by experimental inflammatory arthritis. In this model, osteotomy apparently reversed the bone-wasting process of inflammatory arthritis. This effect was not observed in other zones: the lateral condyle that had not been operated on, the metaphysis, or the diaphysis.