Articular Cartilage Defects Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the cartilage wear pattern a/w chronic ACL tears?

A

Anterior LFC and posterolateral tibia

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2
Q

Where are most OCD lesions found in the knee?

A

Posterolateral aspect of MFC (>70%)

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3
Q

What is the classification for articular cartilage defects?

A
Outerbridge:
I- softening
II- fissures
III- crabmeat
IV- exposed subchondral bone
ICRS (International Cartilage Repair Society):
0- normal cartilage
I- nearly normal (superficial lesions)
II- less than 50% cartilage depth
III- >50% cartilage depth
IV- exposed subchondral bone
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4
Q

What is the best radiographic view for visualizing early articular cartilage loss?

A

45 degree standing PA knee

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5
Q

What is a general algorithm for osteochondral defects?

A

If less than 2-3cm: microfracture or osteochondral autograft transfer
If >3cm: osteochondral allograft transfer or autologous chondrocyte implantation

Or if less than 4cm^2 then microfracture/autograft
If >4cm^2 then Allograft

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6
Q

What is done post-operatively for microfracture?

A

Protected weight bearing for 6-8 weeks with CPM

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7
Q

How long is a patient NWB after osteochondral autograft transfer (Mosiacplasty)?

A

3 months; bone plugs are taken from a low contact area (preiphery of trochlea or notch) and transferred to the high contact area with a defect

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8
Q

What is osteochondral allograft implantation?

A

Use of cadaveric frozen articular cartilage. Plugs are cut out and fit intraoperatively. Risk of disease transmission

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9
Q

What are contraindications to the Fulkerson procedure?

A

1) skeletal immaturity
2) Superior or medial patellar arthritis
3) MFC arthritis

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10
Q

What is an evolving imaging technique to evaluate cartilage defects?

A

dGEMRIC (delayed gadolinium-enhanced MRI for cartilage); normal MRI sequences [Fat-suppressed T2, proton density, T2 fast spin-echo (FSE)]

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11
Q

What tissue type does microfracture heal with?

A

Fibrocartilage (made up of mostly Type I cartilage)

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