| | 2005 Volume No 9- pages 23-32 Title: Current strategies for articular cartilage repair | Authors: S. N. Redman, S. F. Oldfield and C.W. Archer | Address: CITER (Cardiff Institute of Tissue Engineering and Repair), Cardiff School of Biosciences, Museum Avenue, Cardiff, CF10 3US, Wales, UK | E-mail: archer at cardiff.ac.uk | Key Words: Cartilage Repair, Articular Cartilage, Mesenchymal Stem Cells, Cartilage Defects, Chondrocyte Plasticity. | Publication date: April 14th 2005 | Abstract: Defects of articular cartilage that do not penetrate to the subchondral bone fail to heal spontaneously. Defects that penetrate to the subchondral bone elicit an intrinsic repair response that yields a fibrocartilaginous repair tissue which is a poor substitute for hyaline articular cartilage. Many arthroscopic repair strategies employed utilise this intrinsic repair response to induce the formation of a repair tissue within the defect. The goal, however, is to produce a repair tissue that has the same functional and mechanical properties of hyaline articular cartilage. To this end, autologous osteochondral transfer can provide symptomatic relief. This technique involves the excision of healthy cartilage plugs from non-load bearing regions of the joint for implantation into the defect. Cell based transplantation methods currently involve the transplantation of expanded autologous chondrocytes to the defects to form a repair tissue. This technique again involves the excision of healthy cartilage from the joint for expansion. Current research is exploring the potential use of mesenchymal stem cells as a source for tissue engineering, as well as the combination of cells with biodegradable scaffolds. Although current repair strategies improve joint function, further research is required to prevent future degeneration of repair tissue. | Article download: Pages 23-32. (PDF file) | Acrobat Reader: | To read this article you will need to install Adobe Acrobat Reader on your computer. Should you experience any difficulty in reading the PDF file we suggest that you save the file to your computer BEFORE opening it from Adobe Acrobat. | | |