Menisci Aging, pathology and rehab Flashcards

1
Q

Functions:

A
Load distribution decreases stress 
Shock absorption
Joint stability - against translation
Proprioception
Lubrication - compress fibrocartilagenous structure releases SF
> protects articular cartilage
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2
Q

semi-lunar shaped

A

increases congruency
increase contact
decrease stress

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3
Q

Medial meniscus is:

A
  • longer A-P

* larger posterior hor

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4
Q

Lateral menisci is more:

A
  • variable
  • mobile

Meniscal coverage of plateau:
Medial 50-75% - but greater load med. More bound/moves less out of road therefore injured more
Lateral 75-93%

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5
Q

Internal structure: composition

A

Early development = all cells similar Adult = outer zone – ‘fibroblast-like’
Long cell extensions = communication!
Collagen Type I = 80% dry weight
= inner zone – ‘fibrochondrocytes’
Collagen = 70% dry weight Type II > Type I
=superficial zone - progenitor cells

Proteoglycans > in the inner 2/3 ~1/8 of that in hyaline

  • fibrocartilage, antisotropic
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6
Q

Internal structure:

collagen alignment

A

Anisotropic:
collagen fibers orient with the local axis of stress
* lines parallel to resist tensile stress
moves out (collagen T1) > * Radial fibres also present in midzone and especially on surfaces (tibial > femoral)

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7
Q

Vascularisation

A

Birth = 100%
~10 years = 10-30%
Adult = peripheral 10-25%

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8
Q

Innervation:

A

Coronal section of medial compartment
PCP = perimeniscal capillary plexus
Outer 1/3 ‘vascular zone’ Mechanoreceptors esp horns
* if have inner tear, more difficult to heal

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9
Q

Biomechanics:

A

Compressive loading generates significant radial & circumferential stresses:

  • tensile stress from horns and forces out radially
    turns radial > circum. stress
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10
Q

Meniscal translation 250 during movement

A

both menisci translate post. on tibia and post. horn moves towards centre of joint

In full flex = compression of post. horn of meniscus

“The medial and lateral menisci translate posteriorly an additional -1.7mm and 0.9mm respectively and
medially by 1.7mm and -5.6mm respectively during joint loading.”

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11
Q

Ultimate tensile strength

A
  • relative to fibre alignment
  • Parallel 6.3-8MPa
  • Perpendicular <1MPa
  • Increases with age (cross-linkages)
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12
Q

Aging:

A

earliest changes occurred predominantly along the inner rim anterior horns of both medial and lateral menisci were less affected by age and OA
• Surface roughness with severe fibrillation
• Cellular senescence > decreased cell density,
• the appearance of acellular zones,
• mucoid degeneration
• Increase in collagen amount, fibril diameter & cross-link

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13
Q

aging 2

A

starts along inner rim

- once surface protective layer broken, surface more permeable and lose fluid therefore ECM substance effected

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14
Q

Pathology: OA related changes

A

Menisci from OA joints showed:
•severe fibrocartilaginous separation of the matrix
• extensive fraying
• tears (major pathology, if tears > fails)
• calcification
• abnormal cell arrangements included
• decreasedcellularity,
• diffusehypercellularity, • cellular hypertrophy,
• abnormal cell clusters.

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15
Q

Pathology:

A

Tears:

  1. Traumatic - acute incident
  2. Degenerative - fatigue/accumulation
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16
Q

Diagnosis:

A
  • Subjective & objective examination
  • Arthroscopy = gold standard
  • MRI sensitivity 93% MM & 79% LM
  • specificity 88% MM & 96% LM
17
Q

ISAKOS classification of meniscal tears:

International Society of Arthroscopy, Knee Surgery and Orthopaedic Sports Medicine

A
Depth
• partial
• Complete
Location
• Rim
- circumferential zone 1,2,3
• Radial
- Anterior
- Middle
- Posterior
• Tear pattern
18
Q

ISAKOS classification of tear pattern:

A
Longitudinal
• Young athletic
• +/- ACL
• Zone1&amp;2
• Posterior
• Bucket-handle
Horizontal
• Degenerative
Radial
• Most common type in young adults
• At junction of 1/3’s
19
Q

Rehabilitation:

A
  1. Repair
  2. Menisectomy
    • partial
    • Complete > 235–335% increase in peak local contact load
  3. Tissue engineering
    • autologous / allogeneic / exogeneic
    • stem cells