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Abstract Posttraumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) is typically initiated by momentary supraphysiologic shear and compressive forces delivered to articular cartilage during acute joint injury and develops through subsequent degradation of cartilage matrix components and tissue remodeling. PTOA affects 12% of the population who experience osteoarthritis and is attributed to over $3 billion dollars annually in healthcare costs. It is currently unknown whether articulation of the joint post‐injury helps tissue healing or exacerbates cellular dysfunction and eventual death. We hypothesize that post‐injury cartilage articulation will lead to increased cartilage damage. Our objective was to test this hypothesis by mimicking the mechanical environment of the joint during and post‐injury and determining if subsequent joint articulation exacerbates damage produced by initial injury. We use a model of PTOA that combines impact injury and repetitive sliding with confocal microscopy to quantify and track chondrocyte viability, apoptosis, and mitochondrial depolarization in a depth‐dependent manner. Cartilage explants were harvested from neonatal bovine knee joints and subjected to either rapid impact injury (17.34 ± 0.99 MPa, 21.6 ± 2.45 GPa/s), sliding (60 min at 1 mm/s, under 15% axial compression), or rapid impact injury followed by sliding. Explants were then bisected and fluorescently stained for cell viability, caspase activity (apoptosis), and mitochondria polarization. Results show that compared to either impact or sliding alone, explants that were both impacted and slid experienced higher magnitudes of damage spanning greater tissue depths.more » « less
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Middendorf, Jill M.; Diamantides, Nicole; Kim, Byumsu; Dugopolski, Caroline; Kennedy, Stephen; Blahut, Eric; Cohen, Itai; Bonassar, Lawrence J. (, Acta Biomaterialia)
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