J Bone Joint Surg Am
September 2011
This study examines the use of a devitalized biological knee as a scaffold for repopulation with chondrocytes and tests the hypothesis that the devitalized scaffold would become repopulated with the foreign chondrocytes when placed in a suitable environment. Chimeric knee constructs were engineered in vitro and their ectopic in vivo fate was examined in SCID mice. The constructs were made by applying porous collagen sponges that contained viable bovine articular chondrocytes to shaved articular surfaces of devitalized embryonic chick knees.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The avascular portion of the meniscus cartilage in the knee does not have the ability to repair spontaneously.
Hypothesis: Cell-based therapy is able to repair a lesion in the swine meniscus.
Study Design: Controlled laboratory study.
This study assessed the feasibility of a devitalized knee as a scaffold for an engineered chimeric joint. Embryonic chick knees (19 days old), devitalized by lyophilization or multiple freeze-thaw cycles, were tested as scaffolds for repopulation with bovine articular chondrocytes (bACs). bACs were seeded into porous three-dimensional collagen sponges and were cultured for 1 day before fabrication of chimeric constructs.
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