Publications by authors named "A Ristaniemi"

Site-specific differences in the compressive properties of tibiofemoral joint articular cartilage are well-documented, while exploration of tensile and frictional properties in humans remains limited. Thus, this study aimed to characterize and compare the tensile, compressive and frictional properties of articular cartilage across different sites of the tibiofemoral joint, and to establish relationships between these properties and cartilage degeneration. We cut human tibiofemoral joint (N = 5) cartilage surfaces into tensile testing samples (n = 155) and osteochondral plugs (n = 40) to determine the tensile, friction and compressive properties, as well as OARSI grades.

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Article Synopsis
  • ACL injuries are common in young, active adults, but their effects on knee ligament properties are not well understood.
  • This study examined the viscoelastic properties of collateral ligaments in rabbits with ACL injuries compared to healthy and opposite knees.
  • Results indicate that ACL-injured knees have stiffer ligaments and altered mechanics, highlighting important considerations for biomechanical studies and rehabilitation approaches.
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Purpose: To assess the potential for accelerating continuous-wave (CW) T dispersion measurement with compressed sensing approach via studying the effect that the data reduction has on the ability to detect differences between intact and degenerated articular cartilage with different spin-lock amplitudes and to assess quantitative bias due to acceleration.

Methods: Osteochondral plugs (n = 27, 4 mm diameter) from femur (n = 14) and tibia (n = 13) regions from human cadaver knee joints were obtained from commercial biobank (Science Care, USA) under Ethical permission 134/2015. MRI of specimens was performed at 9.

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The 3D printing process of fused deposition modelling is an attractive fabrication approach to create tissue-engineered bone substitutes to regenerate large mandibular bone defects, but often lacks desired surface porosity for enhanced protein adsorption and cell adhesion. Solvent-based printing leads to the spontaneous formation of micropores on the scaffold's surface upon solvent removal, without the need for further post processing. Our aim is to create and characterize porous scaffolds using a new formulation composed of mechanically stable poly(lactic-co-glycol acid) and osteoconductive β-tricalcium phosphate with and without the addition of elastic thermoplastic polyurethane prepared by solvent-based 3D-printing technique.

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Intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration and methods for repair and regeneration have commonly been studied in organ cultures with animal IVDs under compressive loading. With the recent establishment of a novel multi-axial organ culture system, accurate predictions of the global and local mechanical response of the IVD are needed for control system development and to aid in experiment planning. This study aimed to establish a finite element model of bovine IVD capable of predicting IVD behavior at physiological and detrimental load levels.

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