Abstract

Full-thickness osteochondral defects in the femoral condyles of 25 rabbits were repaired using artificial implants made of Teflon ® or Dacron ®. The 6 and 12 month results were compared with ungrafted defects (natural repair) and periosteal grafting. Throughout the observation period, all repair sites were three-fold more compliant than normal cartilage (P < 0.01). The adjacent cartilage was unaffected. Splits between the repair sites and the adjacent cartilage were common. At 6 months, the Dacron repairs had higher scores than natural repair (P < 0.05). Between 6 and 12 months, no significant change in appearance was noted for the artificial repairs. At 1 yr, the scores for natural and Dacron repairs were similarly high, but natural repair had more surface fibrillation (P < 0.05). Periosteal grafting had a lower score than Dacron repair (P < 0.01). Synovitis and artificial debris tended to decrease with time (n.s., P < 0.06). In the present model, Dacron repair of small cartilage defects at 1 yr showed better neocartilage quality than periosteal grafting. Dacron had earlier neocartilage formation than unrepaired defects, and showed no late deterioration, but normal cartilage mechanics and morphology were not attained.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call