To determine whether subchondral bone in osteoarthritis differs from that seen in normal human aging, osteoarthritic femoral heads removed for total hip arthroplasty were compared with normal age-matched and young autopsy controls. Standardized, 1-cm deep, weight-bearing and nonweight-bearing subchondral bone blocks, as well as cancellous core bone, 2-4 cm deep on the articular surface, were examined in each femoral head. Mineralization was assessed using density fractionation and chemical analysis, and compared to histomorphometry. In osteoarthritis, both weight-bearing and nonweight-bearing surface subchondral bone showed a lower degree of mineralization than age-matched and young controls. Histomorphometric analysis showed that subchondral bone thickness, as well as all osteoid parameters and eroded surfaces, were increased in osteoarthritic samples versus controls. Mineralization in the deep cancellous core bone increased with normal aging but underwent less change with osteoarthritis. Histomorphometry of the cancellous core showed that osteoid parameters, but not bone volume, were increased in osteoarthritis versus controls. In conclusion, osteoarthritis is associated with a thickening of the subchondral bone with an abnormally low mineralization pattern.
The Toll-like receptor (TLR)4 is the major sensor for bacterial lipopolysaccharide and its two common co-segregating polymorphisms, Asp299Gly and Thr399Ile, which occur at a frequency of between 6 and 10%, have been associated with infectious diseases, LPS hypo-responsiveness and cardiovascular disease. Porphyromonas gingivalis is a Gram-negative bacterium implicated in chronic periodontitis and is a known TLR4 and TLR2 agonist. We obtained two gingival epithelial cell primary cultures from subjects heterozygous for the TLR4 polymorphism Asp299Gly and compared response characteristics with similar cells from patients (four) with the wild-type TLR4 genes. Cytokine responses and transcriptome profiles of gingival epithelial cell primary culture cells to TNFa challenge were similar for all primary epithelial cell cultures. P. gingivalis challenge, however, gave markedly different responses for Asp299Gly heterozygous and wild-type epithelial cell cultures. The epithelial cells heterozygous for the TLR4 polymorphism Asp299Gly were functionally hypo-responsive, evidenced by differences in BD-2 mRNA expression, mRNA response profile by microarray analysis and by pro-inflammatory and chemokine cytokines at the protein and mRNA level. These findings emphasize variance in human epithelial cell TLRs, linked with Asp299Gly carriage, which results in a hypo-responsive epithelial cell phenotype less susceptible to Gram-negative diseases and associated systemic conditions.
A new internal Mini-Locking-System was tested compared with conventional 2.0mm Mini plates. Standardised osteotomies in the angular region of 16 human cadaver mandibles were fixed with a 6-hole-plate at the oblique line. Osteosynthesis and stability of fixation was proofed in a three dimensional in-vitro-model in which functional load was simulated. Comparison of the different osteosynthesis techniques showed that in the case of Miniplate fixation torsion and gapping of the bone fragments occurred following plate application and screw tightening when the plates were pressed onto the bone, so last incongruences between bone surface and plate were transferred to the mobile bone fragments resulting in more extended gaps and torsion. This was only observed to a much lesser extent with the Mini-Locking-System due to the fixation principle avoiding pressure to the bone. During functional loading the Mini-Locking-System showed also a significant higher stability in comparison to conventional Miniplates. Due to the fixation method imitating the principles of a fixateur the screws form together with the plate and the cortical bone a frame construction. Loading forces are transmitted without the need of plate friction directly from bone over the screws to the plate resulting in higher
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