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Microscale strain mapping demonstrates the importance of interface slope in the mechanics of cartilage repair

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)

Author

R.M. Irwin
T. Gao
A.J. Boys
K. Ortved
Itai Cohen
L.J. Bonassar

Abstract

Achieving lateral integration of articular cartilage repair tissue with surrounding native cartilage remains a clinical challenge. Histological and bulk mechanical studies have identified extracellular matrix components that correlate with superior failure strength, but it is unclear how local changes in geometry and composition at the repair interface affect tissue strains under physiologic loading. Here, we investigated the effects of local compositional and interface geometry on lateral cartilage repair integration by coupling microscale Raman spectroscopy and confocal elastography to measure tissue strains under compressive and shear loading. Histological integration assessments did not have significant relationships with interface strains under compressive loading (p > 0.083) and only the perimeter attachment score was trending towards statistical significance with the |Exy| strain tensor under shear loading (p = 0.050). Interface slope had a stronger correlation with local tissue strains under compressive and shear loading compared to compositional measures of GAG, collagen, or proteins (compressive loading |Eyy| tensor: R2 = 0.400 (interface slope), 0.005 (GAG), 0.024 (collagen), and 0.012 (protein); shear loading |Exy| tensor: R2 = 0.457 (interface slope), 0.003 (GAG), 0.006 (collagen), and 0.000 (total protein)). These data support surgical publications detailing the need for vertical walls when debriding chondral defects. Current histological integration assessments and local compositional measures were insufficient for identifying the variation in interface strains under compressive and shear loading. Thus, our data points to the importance of controlling interface geometry at the time of surgery, which has implications for cartilage repair integration and long-term healing. © 2020 Elsevier Ltd

Date Published

Journal

Journal of Biomechanics

Volume

114

URL

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85097566937&doi=10.1016%2fj.jbiomech.2020.110159&partnerID=40&md5=7a3b3c633e699db167e3a52da01fb1a4

DOI

10.1016/j.jbiomech.2020.110159

Research Area

Group (Lab)

Itai Cohen Group

Funding Source

P200A150273 J
1536463
DMR-1719875
F31AR070009
R01AR071394

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