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Won C. Bae

wonbae@gmail.com

Journal articles

2008
 
PMID 
Kenneth R Gratz, Benjamin L Wong, Won C Bae, Robert L Sah (2008)  The effects of focal articular defects on intra-tissue strains in the surrounding and opposing cartilage.   Biorheology 45: 3-4. 193-207  
Abstract: Focal damage to articular cartilage is commonly found in symptomatic knees and may contribute to patient discomfort and progressive cartilage degeneration. The objective of this study was to quantify changes in cartilage intra-tissue strain and sliding occurring near a focal defect. Pairs of human osteochondral blocks were compressed by 20% of the total cartilage thicknesses, and tissue deformation was recorded by video microscopy. Then, a single, full-thickness defect was created in one block from each pair, blocks were allowed to re-swell, and the pairs were retested. Stained nuclei, acting as fiducial markers, were tracked by digital image correlation and used to calculate cartilage strains and surface displacement. With intact samples, axial strain decreased with depth, as is typical of cartilage, and relatively little sliding occurred between surfaces. With defect samples, axial compression of cartilage at the defect rim rose by approximately 30%, shear in the opposing tissue increased 10-fold to approximately 0.15, and local sliding was elevated to > 50 microm. In vivo, tissue near a defect likely experiences increased overall compression, magnifying these observed in vitro effects. Excessive strains may contribute to cell death, matrix damage, or accelerated wear, and repair efficacy may depend on the ability to alleviate adverse mechanical conditions.
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Gratz, Wong, Bae, Sah (2008)  The effects of focal articular defects on cartilage contact mechanics.   J Orthop Res Oct  
Abstract: Focal damage to articular cartilage is common in arthroscopy patients, and may contribute to progressive tissue degeneration by altering the local mechanical environment. The effects of a focal defect, which may be oriented at various orientations relative to the subchondral bone, on the dynamics of cartilage contact and deformation are unclear. The objective of this study was to elucidate the effect of experimental full thickness focal defects, oriented at 80 degrees or 100 degrees relative to the subchondral bone, on intratissue strain and surface sliding of opposing cartilage surfaces during compression and stress relaxation. Pairs of intact bovine osteochondral blocks were compressed uniaxially by 20%, and allowed to stress relax. Tissue deformation was recorded by video microscopy. A full-thickness defect (with either 80 degrees or 100 degrees edges) was created in one block from each pair. Blocks were allowed to reswell and retested. Defect edges were then recut with the opposite orientation, allowed to reswell, and retested again. Stained nuclei were tracked by digital image correlation and used to quantify cartilage strains and surface sliding. The results indicated that loading of intact samples caused axial strain magnitudes that decreased with depth and relatively little sliding. With loading of samples containing defects, strain magnitudes were elevated in cartilage adjacent to, and opposing, defects. For samples with edge orientations of 100 degrees , sliding magnitudes were increased over surfaces adjacent to defects. These local mechanical changes due to full-thickness articular cartilage defects may contribute to altered chondrocyte metabolism, tissue damage, or accelerated wear. (c) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci.
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Benjamin L Wong, Won C Bae, Kenneth R Gratz, Robert L Sah (2008)  Shear deformation kinematics during cartilage articulation: effect of lubrication, degeneration, and stress relaxation.   Mol Cell Biomech 5: 3. 197-206 Sep  
Abstract: During joint articulation, the biomechanical behavior of cartilage not only facilitates load-bearing and low-friction, but also provides regulatory cues to chondrocytes. Elucidation of cartilage kinematics under combined compression and shearing conditions clarifies these cues in health and disease. The objectives of this study were to elucidate the effects of lubricant, tissue degeneration, and stress relaxation duration on cartilage shear kinematics during articulation. Human osteochondral cores with normal and mildly degenerate surface structures were isolated. Paired blocks from each core were apposed, compressed, allowed to stress relax for 5 or 60 min, and shear tested with a micro-scale video microscopy system using phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) or synovial fluid as lubricant. During applied lateral motion, local and overall shear strain (Exz) of articular cartilage were determined. The applied lateral displacement at which Exz reached 50% of the peak (Deltax(1/2)) was also determined. Quantitatively, surface Exz increased at the onset of lateral motion and peaked just as surfaces detached and slid. With continued lateral motion, surface Exz was maintained. After short stress relaxation, effects of lubrication on Exz and Deltax(1/2) were not apparent. With prolonged stress relaxation, Exz and Deltax(1/2) near the articular surface increased markedly when PBS was used as lubricant. Similar patterns were observed for overall Exz and Deltax(1/2). With degeneration, surface Exz was consistently higher for all cases after the onset of lateral motion. Thus, cartilage shear kinematics is markedly affected by lubricant, cartilage degeneration, and loading duration. Changes in these factors may be involved in the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis.
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Eunhee Han, Won C Bae, Nancy D Hsieh-Bonassera, Van W Wong, Barbara L Schumacher, Simon Görtz, Koichi Masuda, William D Bugbee, Robert L Sah (2008)  Shaped, stratified, scaffold-free grafts for articular cartilage defects.   Clin Orthop Relat Res 466: 8. 1912-1920 Aug  
Abstract: One goal of treatment for large articular cartilage defects is to restore the anatomic contour of the joint with tissue having a structure similar to native cartilage. Shaped and stratified cartilaginous tissue may be fabricated into a suitable graft to achieve such restoration. We asked if scaffold-free cartilaginous constructs, anatomically shaped and targeting spherically-shaped hips, can be created using a molding technique and if biomimetic stratification of the shaped constructs can be achieved with appropriate superficial and middle/deep zone chondrocyte subpopulations. The shaped, scaffold-free constructs were formed from the alginate-released bovine calf chondrocytes with shaping on one (saucer), two (cup), or neither (disk) surfaces. The saucer and cup constructs had shapes distinguishable quantitatively (radius of curvature of 5.5 +/- 0.1 mm for saucer and 2.8 +/- 0.1 mm for cup) and had no adverse effects on the glycosaminoglycan and collagen contents and their distribution in the constructs as assessed by biochemical assays and histology, respectively. Biomimetic stratification of chondrocyte subpopulations in saucer- and cup-shaped constructs was confirmed and quantified using fluorescence microscopy and image analysis. This shaping method, combined with biomimetic stratification, has the potential to create anatomically contoured large cartilaginous constructs.
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W C Bae, V W Wong, J Hwang, J M Antonacci, G E Nugent-Derfus, M E Blewis, M M Temple-Wong, R L Sah (2008)  Wear-lines and split-lines of human patellar cartilage: relation to tensile biomechanical properties.   Osteoarthritis Cartilage 16: 7. 841-845 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Articular cartilage undergoes age-associated degeneration, resulting in both structural and functional biomechanical changes. At early stages of degeneration, wear-lines develop in the general direction of joint movement. With aging, cartilage exhibits a decrease in tensile modulus. The tensile modulus of cartilage has also been related to the orientation of the collagen network, as revealed by split-lines. OBJECTIVE: To determine the relative contribution of wear-line and split-line orientation on the tensile biomechanical properties of human patellar cartilage from different depths. METHODS: In human patellar cartilage, wear- and split-lines are aligned parallel to each other at the proximal facet, and perpendicular to each other at the medial facet. Using superficial, middle, and deep cartilage sections from these two sites, tensile samples were prepared in two orthogonal orientations. Thus, for each depth, there were four groups of samples, with their long axes were aligned either parallel or perpendicular to wear-line direction and also aligned parallel or perpendicular to split-line direction. Uniaxial tensile tests were performed to assess equilibrium and ramp moduli. RESULTS: Tensile equilibrium moduli varied with wear-line orientation (P<0.05) and depth (P<0.001), in an interactive manner (P<0.05), and tended to vary with split-line orientation (P=0.16). In the superficial layer, equilibrium and ramp modulus were higher when the samples were loaded parallel to wear-lines (P<0.05). CONCLUSION: These results indicate that mild wear (i.e., wear-line formation) at the articular surface has deleterious functional effects on articular cartilage and represent an early aging-associated degenerative change. The identification and recognition of functional biomechanical consequences of wear-lines are useful for planning and interpreting tensile biomechanical tests in human articular cartilage.
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Jennifer Hwang, Won C Bae, Wendy Shieu, Chad W Lewis, William D Bugbee, Robert L Sah (2008)  Increased hydraulic conductance of human articular cartilage and subchondral bone plate with progression of osteoarthritis.   Arthritis Rheum 58: 12. 3831-3842 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Osteoarthritis (OA) is characterized by progressive degeneration of articular cartilage and remodeling of the subchondral bone plate, comprising calcified cartilage and underlying subchondral bone. Calcified cartilage remodeling due to upward invasion by vascular canals or to calcified cartilage erosion may contribute to biomechanical alteration of the osteochondral tissue and its subchondral bone plate component. The study hypothesis was that hydraulic conductance of osteochondral tissue and subchondral bone plate increases with structural changes indicative of increasing stages of OA. METHODS: Osteochondral cores were harvested from the knees of cadaveric tissue donors and from discarded fragments from patients with OA undergoing knee surgery. The osteochondral cores from tissue donors were macroscopically normal, and the cores from patients with OA had partial-thickness or full-thickness erosion to bone. The cores were perfusion-tested to determine the hydraulic conductance, or ease of fluid flow, in their native state and after enzymatic removal of cartilage. Adjacent portions were analyzed by 3-dimensional histology for calcified cartilage, subchondral bone, and subchondral bone plate thickness and vascular canal density. RESULTS: Hydraulic conductance of native osteochondral tissue and subchondral bone plate was higher (2,700-fold and 3-fold, respectively) in fully eroded samples than in normal samples. The calcified cartilage layer was thicker (1.5-fold) in partially eroded samples than in normal samples but thinner and incomplete in fully eroded samples. Subchondral bone plate vascularity was altered with increasing stages of OA. CONCLUSION: During joint loading, increased hydraulic conductance of the osteochondral tissue and subchondral bone plate could have deleterious biomechanical consequences for cartilage. Increased fluid exudation from overlying and opposing cartilage, increased fluid depressurization, and increased cartilage tissue strains could lead to chondrocyte death and cartilage damage.
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Benjamin L Wong, Won C Bae, June Chun, Kenneth R Gratz, Martin Lotz, Robert L Sah (2008)  Biomechanics of cartilage articulation: effects of lubrication and degeneration on shear deformation.   Arthritis Rheum 58: 7. 2065-2074 Jul  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To characterize cartilage shear strain during articulation, and the effects of lubrication and degeneration. METHODS: Human osteochondral cores from lateral femoral condyles, characterized as normal or mildly degenerated based on surface structure, were selected. Under video microscopy, pairs of osteochondral blocks from each core were apposed, compressed 15%, and subjected to relative lateral motion with synovial fluid (SF) or phosphate buffered saline (PBS) as lubricant. When cartilage surfaces began to slide steadily, shear strain (Exz) and modulus (G) overall in the full tissue thickness and also as a function of depth from the surface were determined. RESULTS: In normal tissue with SF as lubricant, Exz was highest (0.056) near the articular surface and diminished monotonically with depth, with an overall average Exz of 0.028. In degenerated cartilage with SF as lubricant, Exz near the surface (0.28) was 5-fold that of normal cartilage and localized there, with an overall E(xz) of 0.041. With PBS as lubricant, Exz values near the articular surface were approximately 50% higher than those observed with SF, and overall Exz was 0.045 and 0.062 in normal and degenerated tissue, respectively. Near the articular surface, G was lower with degeneration (0.06 MPa, versus 0.18 MPa in normal cartilage). In both normal and degenerated cartilage, G increased with tissue depth to 3-4 MPa, with an overall G of 0.26-0.32 MPa. CONCLUSION: During articulation, peak cartilage shear is highest near the articular surface and decreases markedly with depth. With degeneration and diminished lubrication, the markedly increased cartilage shear near the articular surface may contribute to progressive cartilage deterioration and osteoarthritis.
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2007
 
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Kyle D Jadin, Won C Bae, Barbara L Schumacher, Robert L Sah (2007)  Three-dimensional (3-D) imaging of chondrocytes in articular cartilage: growth-associated changes in cell organization.   Biomaterials 28: 2. 230-239 Jan  
Abstract: Three-dimensional (3-D) imaging and analysis techniques can be used to assess the organization of cells in biological tissues, providing key insights into the role of cell arrangement in growth, homeostasis, and degeneration. The objective of the present study was to use such methods to assess the growth-related changes in cell organization of articular cartilage from different sites in the bovine knee. Three-dimensional images of fetal, calf, and adult cartilage were obtained and processed to identify cell nuclei. The density of cells was lower with growth and with increasing depth from the articular surface. The cell organization, assessed by the angle to the nearest neighboring cell, also varied with growth, and reflected the classical organization of cells in adult tissue, with neighboring cells arranged horizontally in the superficial zone (average angle of 20 degrees) and vertically in the deep zone (60 degrees). In all other regions and growth stages of cartilage, the angle was approximately 32 degrees, indicative of an isotropic organization. On the contrary, the nearest neighbor distance did not vary significantly with growth or depth. Together, these results indicate that cartilage growth is associated with distinctive 3-D arrangements of groups of chondrocytes.
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W C Bae, B L Schumacher, R L Sah (2007)  Indentation probing of human articular cartilage: Effect on chondrocyte viability.   Osteoarthritis Cartilage 15: 1. 9-18 Jan  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Clinical arthroscopic probes based on indentation testing are being developed. However, the biological effects of certain design parameters (i.e., tip geometry and size) and loading protocols (i.e., indentation depth, rate, and repetition) on human articular cartilage are unclear. OBJECTIVE: Determine if indenter design and indentation protocol modulate mechanical injury of probed cartilage samples. METHODS: The objectives of this study were to determine the effects of indentation testing using clinically applicable tips (0.4mm radius, plane- or sphere-ended) and protocols (indentation depths of 100, 200, or 300 microm, applied at a rate of 50 or 500 microm/s) on the extent and the pattern of chondrocyte death, should it occur. Grossly normal osteochondral blocks were harvested from human talar dome, indented, stained with live/dead dyes, and imaged en face on a fluorescence microscope. RESULTS: The occurrence and the extent of cell death generally increased with indentation depth, being undetected at an indentation depth of 100 microm but marked at 300 microm. In addition, tip geometry affected the pattern of cell death: ring- and solid circle-shaped areas of cell deaths were apparent when compressed to 300 microm using plane- and sphere-ended indenters. CONCLUSION: Indenter design and indentation protocol modulated the extent and the pattern of chondrocyte death. These results have implications for designing indentation probes and protocols, as well as clinicians performing arthroscopic probing.
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Travis J Klein, Manu Chaudhry, Won C Bae, Robert L Sah (2007)  Depth-dependent biomechanical and biochemical properties of fetal, newborn, and tissue-engineered articular cartilage.   J Biomech 40: 1. 182-190 01  
Abstract: Adult articular cartilage has depth-dependent mechanical and biochemical properties which contribute to zone-specific functions. The compressive moduli of immature cartilage and tissue-engineered cartilage are known to be lower than those of adult cartilage. The objective of this study was to determine if such tissues exhibit depth-dependent compressive properties, and how these depth-varying properties were correlated with cell and matrix composition of the tissue. The compressive moduli of fetal and newborn bovine articular cartilage increased with depth (p<0.05) by a factor of 4-5 from the top 0.1 mm (28+/-13 kPa, 141+/-10 kPa, respectively) to 1 mm deep into the tissue. Likewise, the glycosaminoglycan and collagen content increased with depth (both p<0.001), and correlated with the modulus (both p<0.01). In contrast, tissue-engineered cartilage formed by either layering or mixing cells from the superficial and middle zone of articular cartilage exhibited similarly soft regions at both construct surfaces, as exemplified by large equilibrium strains. The properties of immature cartilage may provide a template for developing tissue-engineered cartilage which aims to repair cartilage defects by recapitulating the natural development and growth processes. These results suggest that while depth-dependent properties may be important to engineer into cartilage constructs, issues other than cell heterogeneity must be addressed to generate such tissues.
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M M Temple, W C Bae, M Q Chen, M Lotz, D Amiel, R D Coutts, R L Sah (2007)  Age- and site-associated biomechanical weakening of human articular cartilage of the femoral condyle.   Osteoarthritis Cartilage 15: 9. 1042-1052 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To determine the time sequence of biochemical and structural events associated with, and hypothesized to underlie, age-associated tensile weakening of macroscopically normal adult human articular cartilage of the knee. METHODS: Macroscopically normal human articular cartilage of the lateral and medial femoral condyles (LFC and MFC) from Young (21-39 yrs), Middle (40-59 yrs), and Old (>/=60 yrs) age donors were analyzed for tensile properties, surface wear, and cell and matrix composition. RESULTS: Variations in tensile, compositional, and surface structural properties were indicative of early, intermediate, and late stages of age-associated cartilage deterioration, occurring at an earlier age in the MFC than the LFC. Differences between Young and Middle age groups (indicative of early-to-intermediate stage changes) included decreased mechanical function in the superficial zone, with a loss of (or low) tensile integrity, and surface wear, with faint striations and mild staining on the articular surface after application of India ink. Differences between Middle and Old age groups (indicative of intermediate-to-late stage changes) included maintenance of moderate level biomechanical function, a decrease in cellularity, and a decrease in matrix glycosaminoglycan content. Tissue fluorescence increased steadily with age. CONCLUSIONS: Many of these age-associated differences are identical to those regarded as pathological features of cartilage degeneration in early osteoarthritis. These findings provide evidence for the roles of mechanical wear, cell death, and enzymatic degradation in mediating the progression through successive and distinguishable stages of early cartilage deterioration.
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G E Nugent-Derfus, T Takara, J K O'neill, S B Cahill, S Görtz, T Pong, H Inoue, N M Aneloski, W W Wang, K I Vega, T J Klein, N D Hsieh-Bonassera, W C Bae, J D Burke, W D Bugbee, R L Sah (2007)  Continuous passive motion applied to whole joints stimulates chondrocyte biosynthesis of PRG4.   Osteoarthritis Cartilage 15: 5. 566-574 May  
Abstract: Continuous passive motion (CPM) is currently a part of patient rehabilitation regimens after a variety of orthopedic surgical procedures. While CPM can enhance the joint healing process, the direct effects of CPM on cartilage metabolism remain unknown. Recent in vivo and in vitro observations suggest that mechanical stimuli can regulate articular cartilage metabolism of proteoglycan 4 (PRG4), a putative lubricating and chondroprotective molecule found in synovial fluid and at the articular cartilage surface. OBJECTIVES: (1) Determine the topographical variation in intrinsic cartilage PRG4 secretion. (2) Apply a CPM device to whole joints in bioreactors and assess effects of CPM on PRG4 biosynthesis. METHODS: A bioreactor was developed to apply CPM to bovine stifle joints in vitro. Effects of 24h of CPM on PRG4 biosynthesis were determined. RESULTS: PRG4 secretion rate varied markedly over the joint surface. Rehabilitative joint motion applied in the form of CPM regulated PRG4 biosynthesis, in a manner dependent on the duty cycle of cartilage sliding against opposing tissues. Specifically, in certain regions of the femoral condyle that were continuously or intermittently sliding against meniscus and tibial cartilage during CPM, chondrocyte PRG4 synthesis was higher with CPM than without. CONCLUSIONS: Rehabilitative joint motion, applied in the form of CPM, stimulates chondrocyte PRG4 metabolism. The stimulation of PRG4 synthesis is one mechanism by which CPM may benefit cartilage and joint health in post-operative rehabilitation.
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2006
 
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Won C Bae, Chad W Lewis, Marc E Levenston, Robert L Sah (2006)  Indentation testing of human articular cartilage: effects of probe tip geometry and indentation depth on intra-tissue strain.   J Biomech 39: 6. 1039-1047 04  
Abstract: Experimental determination of intra-tissue deformation during clinically applicable rapid indentation testing would be useful for understanding indentation biomechanics and for designing safe indentation probes and protocols. The objectives of this study were to perform two-dimensional (2-D) indentation tests, using indenters and protocols that are analogous to those in clinically oriented probes, of normal adult-human articular cartilage in order to determine: (1) intra-tissue strain maps and regions of high strain magnitude, and (2) the effects on strain of indenter geometry (rectangular prismatic and cylindrical) and indentation depth (40-190 microm). Epifluorescence microscopy of samples undergoing indentation and subsequent video image correlation analysis allowed determination of strain maps. Regions of peak strain were near the "edges" of indenter contact with the cartilage surface, and the strain magnitude in these regions ranged from approximately 0.05 to approximately 0.30 in compression and shear, a range with known biological consequences. With increasing indentation displacement, strain magnitudes generally increased in all regions of the tissue. Compared to indentation using a rectangular prismatic tip, indentation with a cylindrical tip resulted in slightly higher peak strain magnitudes while influencing a smaller region of cartilage. These results may be used to refine clinical indenters and indentation protocols.
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G E Nugent, T A Schmidt, B L Schumacher, M S Voegtline, W C Bae, K D Jadin, R L Sah (2006)  Static and dynamic compression regulate cartilage metabolism of PRoteoGlycan 4 (PRG4).   Biorheology 43: 3-4. 191-200  
Abstract: The boundary lubrication function of articular cartilage is mediated in part by molecules at the articular surface and in synovial fluid, encoded by Prg4. The objective of this study was to determine whether static and dynamic compression regulate PRG4 biosynthesis by cartilage explants. Articular cartilage disks were harvested to include the articular surface from immature bovines. Some disks were subjected to 24 h (day 1) of loading, followed by 72 h (days 2-4) of free-swelling culture to assess chondrocyte responses following unloading. Loading consisted of 6 or 100 kPa of static compression, with or without superimposed dynamic compression (10 or 300 kPa peak amplitude, 0.01 Hz). Other disks were cultured free-swelling as controls. PRG4 secretion into culture medium was inhibited by all compression protocols during day 1. Following unloading, cartilage previously subjected to dynamic compression to 300 kPa exhibited a rebound effect, secreting more PRG4 than did controls, while cartilage previously subjected to 100 kPa static loading secreted less PRG4. Immunohistochemistry revealed that all compression protocols also affected the number of cells expressing PRG4. The paradigm that mechanical stimuli regulate biosynthesis in cartilage appears operative not only for load bearing matrix constituents, but also for PRG4 molecules mediating lubrication.
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Boris H Borazjani, Albert C Chen, Won C Bae, Shantanu Patil, Robert L Sah, Gary S Firestein, William D Bugbee (2006)  Effect of impact on chondrocyte viability during insertion of human osteochondral grafts.   J Bone Joint Surg Am 88: 9. 1934-1943 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Osteochondral grafts, used to treat chondral and osteochondral defects, require high insertional forces that may affect the viability of chondrocytes in the graft. The objectives of this study were to (1) measure the loading impact during insertion of osteochondral grafts, (2) evaluate the effect of insertional loading on chondrocyte viability, and (3) assess this effect on chondrocyte apoptosis and activation of caspase-3. METHODS: The distal parts of twelve fresh femora from six adult human cadavers were harvested within seventy-two hours after the death of the donor. From each femur, four 15-mm-diameter cylindrical osteochondral grafts were isolated; two of these grafts (a total of twenty-four grafts in the study) were transplanted with standard impact insertion into recipient sockets in the other condyle of the ipsilateral femur. The other two grafts served as unloaded controls. Loads were measured during the insertion of ten of the twenty-four transplanted grafts. Full-thickness cartilage disks were then removed from the grafts, incubated for up to forty-eight hours, and analyzed for cell viability, TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling)-positive reactivity, and caspase-3 activation, each as a function of the depth from the articular surface. RESULTS: The insertion of an osteochondral graft was characterized, on the average (and standard deviation), by 10 +/- 4 impacts, each generating 2.4 +/- 0.9 kN of load and 13.3 +/- 4.9 MPa of stress for a duration of 0.57 +/- 0.13 ms with a 0.62 +/- 0.25 N.s impulse. Impact insertion increased cell death in the superficial 500 mum to 21% at one hour (p < 0.001) and 47% at forty-eight hours (p < 0.001) and also increased cell death in deeper layers at forty-eight hours. Some cell death was due to apoptosis, as indicated by an increase in caspase-3 activation at eight hours (p < 0.01) and TUNEL-positive cells at forty-eight hours (p < 0.05) in the superficial 500 mum of impacted cartilage. CONCLUSIONS: Impact insertion of osteochondral grafts generates damaging loads that cause chondrocyte death, particularly in the superficial zone, mainly as a result of apoptosis mediated by the activation of caspases. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Chondrocyte death that occurs during impact insertion of osteochondral grafts may lead to compromised function. Understanding the mechanisms and consequences of such impact loading may provide insights into potential therapeutic interventions, or lead to changes in the insertion technique, to decrease the cell injury associated with impact loading.
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2005
 
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Chad W Lewis, Amanda K Williamson, Albert C Chen, Won C Bae, Michele M Temple, W Van Wong, Gayle E Nugent, Susan P James, Donna L Wheeler, Robert L Sah, Chris E Kawcak (2005)  Evaluation of subchondral bone mineral density associated with articular cartilage structure and integrity in healthy equine joints with different functional demands.   Am J Vet Res 66: 10. 1823-1829 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To determine and correlate subchondral bone mineral density and overlying cartilage structure and tensile integrity in mature healthy equine stifle (low magnitude loading) and metacarpophalangeal (high magnitude loading) joints. ANIMALS: 8 healthy horses, 2 to 3 years of age. PROCEDURE: Osteochondral samples were acquired from the medial femoral condyle (FC) and medial trochlear ridge (TR) of the stifle joint and from the dorsal (MC3D) and palmar (MC3P) aspects of the distal medial third metacarpal condyles of the metacarpophalangeal joint. Articular cartilage surface fibrillation (evaluated via India ink staining) and tensile biomechanical properties were determined. The volumetric bone mineral density (vBMD) of the underlying subchondral plate was assessed via dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry. RESULTS: Cartilage staining (fibrillation), tensile moduli, tensile strength, and vBMD were greater in the MC3D and MC3P locations, compared with the FC and TR locations, whereas tensile strain at failure was less in MC3D and MC3P locations than FC and TR locations. Cartilage tensile moduli correlated positively with vBMD, whereas cartilage staining and tensile strain at failure correlated negatively with vBMD. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: In areas of high joint loading, the subchondral bone had high vBMD and the articular cartilage surface layer had high tensile stiffness but signs of structural wear (fibrillation and low failure strain). The site-dependent variations and relationships in this study support the concept that articular cartilage and subchondral bone normally adapt to physiologic loading in a coordinated way.
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Kyle D Jadin, Benjamin L Wong, Won C Bae, Kelvin W Li, Amanda K Williamson, Barbara L Schumacher, Jeffrey H Price, Robert L Sah (2005)  Depth-varying density and organization of chondrocytes in immature and mature bovine articular cartilage assessed by 3d imaging and analysis.   J Histochem Cytochem 53: 9. 1109-1119 Sep  
Abstract: Articular cartilage is a heterogeneous tissue, with cell density and organization varying with depth from the surface. The objectives of the present study were to establish a method for localizing individual cells in three-dimensional (3D) images of cartilage and quantifying depth-associated variation in cellularity and cell organization at different stages of growth. Accuracy of nucleus localization was high, with 99% sensitivity relative to manual localization. Cellularity (million cells per cm3) decreased from 290, 310, and 150 near the articular surface in fetal, calf, and adult samples, respectively, to 120, 110, and 50 at a depth of 1.0 mm. The distance/angle to the nearest neighboring cell was 7.9 microm/31 degrees , 7.1 microm/31 degrees , and 9.1 microm/31 degrees for cells at the articular surface of fetal, calf, and adult samples, respectively, and increased/decreased to 11.6 microm/31 degrees , 12.0 microm/30 degrees , and 19.2 microm/25 degrees at a depth of 0.7 mm. The methodologies described here may be useful for analyzing the 3D cellular organization of cartilage during growth, maturation, aging, degeneration, and regeneration.
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2004
 
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Won C Bae, Amanda W Law, David Amiel, Robert L Sah (2004)  Sensitivity of indentation testing to step-off edges and interface integrity in cartilage repair.   Ann Biomed Eng 32: 3. 360-369 Mar  
Abstract: Step-off edges and tissue interfaces are prevalent in cartilage injury such as after intra-articular fracture and reduction, and in focal defects and surgical repair procedures such as osteochondral graft implantation. It would be useful to assess the function of injured or donor tissues near such step-off edges and the extent of integration at material interfaces. The objective of this study was to determine if indentation testing is sensitive to the presence of step-off edges and the integrity of material interfaces, in both in vitro simulated repair samples of bovine cartilage defect filled with fibrin matrix, and in vivo biological repair samples from a goat animal model. Indentation stiffness decreased at locations approaching a step-off edge, a lacerated interface, or an integrated interface in which the distal tissue was relatively soft. The indentation stiffness increased or remained constant when the site of indentation approached an integrated interface in which the distal tissue was relatively stiff or similar in stiffness to the tissue being tested. These results indicate that indentation testing is sensitive to step-off edges and interface integrity, and may be useful for assessing cartilage injury and for following the progression of tissue integration after surgical treatments.
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Kelvin W Li, Travis J Klein, Kanika Chawla, Gayle E Nugent, Won C Bae, Robert L Sah (2004)  In vitro physical stimulation of tissue-engineered and native cartilage.   Methods Mol Med 100: 325-352  
Abstract: Because of the limited availability of donor cartilage for resurfacing defects in articular surfaces, there is tremendous interest in the in vitro bioengineering of cartilage replacements for clinical applications. However, attaining mechanical properties in engineered cartilaginous constructs that approach those of native cartilage has not been previously achieved when constructs are cultured under free-swelling conditions. One approach toward stimulating the development of constructs that are mechanically more robust is to expose them to physical environments that are similar, in certain ways, to those encountered by native cartilage. This is a strategy motivated by observations in numerous short-term experiments that certain mechanical signals are potent stimulators of cartilage metabolism. On the other hand, excess mechanical loading can have a deleterious effect on cartilage. Culture conditions that include a physical stimulation component are made possible by the use of specialized bioreactors. This chapter addresses some of the issues involved in using bioreactors as integral components of cartilage tissue engineering and in studying the physical regulation of cartilage. We first consider the generation of cartilaginous constructs in vitro. Next we describe the rationale and design of bioreactors that can impart either mechanical deformation or fluid-induced mechanical signals.
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John G Lane, Jennifer B Massie, Scott T Ball, Michael E Amiel, Albert C Chen, Won C Bae, Robert L Sah, David Amiel (2004)  Follow-up of osteochondral plug transfers in a goat model: a 6-month study.   Am J Sports Med 32: 6. 1440-1450 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Osteochondral transfer procedures are increasingly used to resurface full-thickness articular cartilage defects. There has not been long-term assessment/description of autogenous donor and recipient sites. HYPOTHESIS: The healing process occurs at the donor/host cartilage and bone interfaces. STUDY DESIGN: Histologic, biochemical, and biomechanical changes were assessed 6 months after an osteochondral transfer in a goat model. METHODS: Eight adult goats were studied. In the 6 osteochondral transfer goats, 2 autogenous plugs were transferred from the femoral trochlea to defects in the weightbearing portion of the medial femoral condyle. The goats were allowed free range for 6 months. Randomly assigned plugs were assessed. RESULTS: Knees of the sacrificed animals had preservation of the joint space with mild chondromalacic changes in both transfer and contralateral control groups. Histologically, no evidence of cartilage (host/donor) healing was seen. Subchondral bone of the plug was contiguous with the surrounding recipient bone. Cellular viability in the autogenous osteochondral plug was seen, and 35SO4 uptake of the articular cartilage was not statistically different from the contralateral control condyle. The indentation stiffness of the transfer plug (mosaicplasty) and the contralateral donor site were similar--much stiffer than normal cartilage including surrounding condylar cartilage. Large structural stiffness of transferred cores and donor sites appeared to be related to their thinner cartilage layer. CONCLUSIONS: At 6-month follow-up, a cleft between host and transferred articular regions remained, with no integration between the two. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Autogenous transplantation of osteochondral plugs is possible with integration of subchondral bone and preservation of chondral viability.
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PMID 
Albert C Chen, Stephen M Klisch, Won C Bae, Michele M Temple, Kevin B McGowan, Kenneth R Gratz, Barbara L Schumacher, Robert L Sah (2004)  Mechanical characterization of native and tissue-engineered cartilage.   Methods Mol Med 101: 157-190  
Abstract: Cartilage functions as a low-friction, wear-resistant, load-bearing tissue. During a normal gait cycle, one cartilage surface rolls and slides against another, all the while being loaded and unloaded. The durability of the tissue also makes for an impressive material to study. However, when cartilage is damaged or diseased, the tissue has little capacity to repair itself. The goal of cell-based repair strategies to replace damaged or diseased tissue requires that the functional biomechanical properties of normal (developing or mature), diseased, and repair cartilage be restored. This chapter addresses some of the major methods used to assess the biomechanical properties of native and tissue-engineered cartilage. First, the traditional methods of testing by compression, tension, shear, and indentation are reviewed. Next, additional methods to evaluate interfacial mechanics and lubrication are described. Thus, a variety of mechanical tests may be used to assess functional properties for normal, diseased, and tissue-engineered cartilage.
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PMID 
Gayle E Nugent, Amanda W Law, Eric G Wong, Michele M Temple, Won C Bae, Albert C Chen, Chris E Kawcak, Robert L Sah (2004)  Site- and exercise-related variation in structure and function of cartilage from equine distal metacarpal condyle.   Osteoarthritis Cartilage 12: 10. 826-833 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Determine (1) the site-associated response of articular cartilage of the equine distal metacarpal condyle to training at a young age as assessed by changes in indentation stiffness and alterations in cartilage structure and composition, and (2) relationships between indentation stiffness and indices of cartilage structure and composition. METHOD: Experimental animals (n=6) were trained on a track (increasing exercise to 1km/day by 5 months); controls (n=6) were pasture-reared. Animals were euthanized at 18 months and four osteochondral samples were harvested per metacarpal condyle from dorsal-medial, dorsal-lateral, palmar-medial, and palmar-lateral aspects. Cartilage was analyzed for India ink staining (quantified as reflectance score (RS)), short-term indentation stiffness (sphere-ended, 0.4mm diameter), thickness, and biochemical composition. RESULTS: Cartilage structural, biochemical and biomechanical properties varied markedly with site in the joint. Sites just medial and just lateral to the sagittal ridge showed signs of early degeneration, with relatively low RS, indentation stiffness, and collagen content, and relatively high water content. Effects of exercise and side (left vs right) were not detected for any measure. Overall, indentation stiffness correlated positively with RS and collagen content, and inversely with thickness and water content. CONCLUSION: Gentle exercise-imposed mechanical stimulation did not markedly affect articular cartilage function or structure. However, the marked site-associated variation suggests that biomechanical environment can initiate degenerative changes in immature cartilage during joint growth and maturation.
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2003
 
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Won C Bae, Michele M Temple, David Amiel, Richard D Coutts, Gabriele G Niederauer, Robert L Sah (2003)  Indentation testing of human cartilage: sensitivity to articular surface degeneration.   Arthritis Rheum 48: 12. 3382-3394 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To determine, for clinical indentation testing of human articular cartilage, the effects of aging and degeneration on indentation stiffness and traditional indices of cartilage degeneration; the relationship between indentation stiffness and indices of degeneration; and the sensitivity and specificity of indentation stiffness to cartilage degeneration. METHODS: Osteochondral cores from femoral condyles of cadaveric human donors were harvested. Samples were distributed into experimental groups based on donor age (young [20-39 years], middle [40-59 years], and old [>/=60 years]), and a macroscopic articular surface appearance that was either normal or mildly degenerate, without deep erosion. Samples were analyzed for indentation stiffness, cartilage thickness, India ink staining (quantitated as the reflected light score), and Mankin-Shapiro histopathology score. RESULTS: Indentation stiffness, India ink staining, and the histopathology score each varied markedly between normal-sample and degenerate-sample groups but varied relatively little between normal samples obtained from different age groups. A decrease in indentation stiffness (softening) correlated with a decrease in the reflectance score and an increase in the overall histopathology score, especially the surface irregularity component of the histopathology score. Receiver operating characteristic analysis suggested that the indentation testing could accurately detect cartilage degeneration as indicated by macroscopic appearance, India ink staining, and histopathology score. CONCLUSION: The indentation stiffness of the normal to mildly degenerate samples tested in this study was sensitive to mild degeneration at the articular surface and was insensitive to changes associated with normal aging or to slight variations in cartilage thickness. This suggests that indentation testing may be a useful clinical tool for the evaluation of early-stage degenerative changes in articular cartilage.
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2001
 
PMID 
J G Lane, W L Tontz, S T Ball, J B Massie, A C Chen, W C Bae, M E Amiel, R L Sah, D Amiel (2001)  A morphologic, biochemical, and biomechanical assessment of short-term effects of osteochondral autograft plug transfer in an animal model.   Arthroscopy 17: 8. 856-863 Oct  
Abstract: PURPOSE: The objective of this study was to assess the short-term changes that occur after an osteochondral autograft plug transfer from the femoral trochlea to the medial femoral condyle in a goat model. Type of Study: Articular cartilage repair animal study. METHODS: Six adult male goats were used in this study. Two 4.5-mm osteochondral plugs were transferred from the superolateral femoral trochlea to 2 recipient sites in the central portion of the medial femoral condyle for a survival period of 12 weeks. Postmortem, the global effects of the procedure were assessed by gross morphologic inspection and by analyzing the synovial DNA for inflammatory response. The recipient sites were also evaluated histologically and biomechanically. Metabolic activity was determined by (35)SO(4) uptake, and viability was assessed using a live/dead stain and by confocal laser microscopy. RESULTS: There was no evidence of significant gross morphologic or histologic changes in the operative knee as a result of the osteochondral donor or recipient sites. The patella, tibial plateau, and medial meniscus did not show any increased degenerative changes as a result of articulating against the donor or recipient sites of the osteochondral autografts. Analysis of synovial DNA revealed no inflammatory response. Biomechanically, 6- to 7-fold greater stiffness was noted in the cartilage of the transferred plugs compared with the control medial femoral condyle. Furthermore, on histologic examination, the healing subchondral bone interface at the recipient site had increased density. Glycosaminoglycan synthesis as determined by (35)SO(4) uptake was upregulated in the transplanted cartilage plug relative to the contralateral control, showing a repair response at the site of implantation. And finally, confocal microscopy showed 95% viability of the transferred plugs in the medial femoral condyle region. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings demonstrate the ability to successfully transfer an osteochondral autograft plug with maintenance of chondrocyte cellular viability. The transferred cartilage is stiffer than the control medial femoral condyle cartilage, and there is concern regarding the increased trabecular mass in the healing subchondral plate, but these do not result in increased degenerative changes of the opposing articular surfaces in the short term.
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A C Chen, W C Bae, R M Schinagl, R L Sah (2001)  Depth- and strain-dependent mechanical and electromechanical properties of full-thickness bovine articular cartilage in confined compression.   J Biomech 34: 1. 1-12 Jan  
Abstract: Compression tests have often been performed to assess the biomechanical properties of full-thickness articular cartilage. We tested whether the apparent homogeneous strain-dependent properties, deduced from such tests, reflect both strain- and depth-dependent material properties. Full-thickness bovine articular cartilage was tested by oscillatory confined compression superimposed on a static offset up to 45%. and the data fit to estimate modulus, permeability, and electrokinetic coefficient assuming homogeneity. Additional tests on partial-thickness cartilage were then performed to assess depth- and strain-dependent properties in an inhomogeneous model, assuming three discrete layers (i = 1 starting from the articular surface, to i = 3 up to the subchondral bone). Estimates of the zero-strain equilibrium confined compression modulus (H(A0)), the zero-strain permeability (kp0) and deformation dependence constant (M), and the deformation-dependent electrokinetic coefficient (ke) differed among individual layers of cartilage and full-thickness cartilage. HiA0 increased from layer 1 to 3 (0.27 to 0.71 MPa), and bracketed the apparent homogeneous value (0.47 MPa). ki(p0) decreased from layer 1 to 3 (4.6 x 10(-15) to 0.50 x 10(-15) m2/Pa s) and was less than the homogeneous value (7.3 x 10(-15) m2/Pa s), while Mi increased from layer 1 to 3 (5.5 to 7.4) and became similar to the homogeneous value (8.4). The amplitude of ki(e) increased markedly with compressive strain, as did the homogeneous value: at low strain, it was lowest near the articular surface and increased to a peak in the middle-deep region. These results help to interpret the biomechanical assessment of full-thickness articular cartilage.
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2000
 
PMID 
J S Dounchis, W C Bae, A C Chen, R L Sah, R D Coutts, D Amiel (2000)  Cartilage repair with autogenic perichondrium cell and polylactic acid grafts.   Clin Orthop Relat Res 377. 248-264 Aug  
Abstract: The repair of articular cartilage injuries remains a challenge, with many of the current therapeutic strategies based on the grafting or recruitment of chondrogenic tissues or cells. This 1-year study compared the repair of a 3.7-mm diameter by 3-mm deep osteochondral defect in the medial femoral condyle of 24 New Zealand White rabbits; the defect was obtained using an autogenic perichondrium cell polylactic acid composite graft with a contralateral control in which the osteochondral defect remained empty. To elucidate the effect of host immune responses on the repair process after perichondrium cell transplantation, the results of the autogenic perichondrium cell polylactic acid graft group were compared with those obtained in the authors' previous 1-year study of allogenic perichondrium cell polylactic acid composite grafts implanted in a similar model. One year after surgery, the repair site underwent gross inspection and histologic, histomorphometric, biochemical, and biomechanical analyses. The autogenic perichondrium cell polylactic acid graft group (92%) and the control group in which the osteochondral defect remained empty (88%) resulted in a high percentage of grossly acceptable repairs. The autogenic grafts appeared to augment the intrinsic healing capacity of the animals (as compared with the animals in the No Implant Group). The autogenic perichondrium cell polylactic and grafts improved the histologic appearance and percentage of Type II collagen of the cartilaginous repair tissue. Compared with allogenic grafts, the autogenic grafts had better reconstitution of the subchondral bone. However, the results of this experimental model suggest a suboptimal concentration of glycosaminoglycans in the neocartilage matrix, a depressed surface of the repair tissue, a histologic appearance that was not equivalent to that of normal articular cartilage, and reduced biomechanical properties for the repair tissue. The future application of growth factors to this model may yield a treatment that can be applied in the clinical arena.
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