Mosaicplasty for the Treatment of Articular Defects of the Knee and Ankle
Top Cited Papers
- 1 October 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research
- Vol. 391, S328-S336
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00003086-200110001-00030
Abstract
Efficacious treatment of full-thickness cartilage defects of the weightbearing surfaces is a multi-faceted challenge for the orthopaedic surgeon. Autologous osteochondral transplantation represents one solution: to bring about a hyaline or hyalinelike repair of the defected area. The current authors discuss the experimental background and their 8 years of clinical experience with the autologous osteochondral mosaicplasty. Several series of animal studies and subsequent clinical practice have confirmed the survival of the transplanted hyaline cartilage. Hyaline cartilage and fibrocartilage fill the donor sites located on the nonweightbearing surfaces and surfaces that bear less weight. Clinical scores, imaging techniques, control arthroscopies, histologic examination of biopsy samples, and cartilage stiffness measurements were used to evaluate the clinical outcomes and quality of the transplanted cartilage. According to these investigations, femoral condylar implantations have shown good to excellent results in 92%, tibial resurfacing in 88%, patellar and/or trochlear mosaicplasties in 81%, and talar procedures in 94% of patients. The Bandi score showed long-term donor site disturbances in 3% of patients. Fifty-eight of the 68 control arthroscopies had good gliding surfaces, histologically-proven survival of the transplanted hyaline cartilage, and fibrocartilage covering of the donor sites. In the entire series, there were four deep infections and 34 painful hemarthroses after surgery. A multicentric, comparative, prospective evaluation of 413 arthroscopic resurfacing procedures (mosaicplasty, Pridie drilling, abrasion arthroplasty, and microfracture cases in homogenized subgroups) showed that mosaicplasty gave a more favorable clinical outcome in the long-term followup, than the other three techniques. Intermediate-term evaluation of the femoral condylar implantations (3-6-years followup) and talar mosaicplasties (3-7-years followup) confirmed the durability of the early results. From these encouraging results from an increasingly large series and similar results from other centers, it seems that autologous osteochondral mosaicplasty may be a viable alternative treatment of localized full-thickness cartilage damage of the weightbearing surfaces of the knee and other weightbearing synovial joints.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Articular cartilage repair and transplantationArthritis & Rheumatism, 1998
- Mosaicplasty for the Treatment of Articular Cartilage Defects: Application in Clinical PracticeOrthopedics, 1998
- Treatment of Osteochondritis Dissecans of the Talus: Use of the Mosaicplasty Technique—A Preliminary ReportFoot & Ankle International, 1997
- Arthroscopic osteochondral autograft transplantation in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: A preliminary clinical studyKnee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy, 1996
- Treatment of Deep Cartilage Defects in the Knee with Autologous Chondrocyte TransplantationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1994
- Autologous rib perichondrial grafts in experimentally induced osteochondral lesions in the sheep-knee joint: Morphological resultsVirchows Archiv, 1992
- Perichondral grafting for cartilage lesions of the kneeThe Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. British volume, 1990
- Treatment of osteochondral defects of the distal femur with fresh osteochondral allografts: A preliminary reportArthroscopy: The Journal of Arthroscopic & Related Surgery, 1986
- Autogenous patella as replacement for a resected femoral or tibial condyle. A report on 19 casesThe Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. British volume, 1985
- The Allotransplantation of Partial Joints in the Treatment of Osteoarthritis of the KneePublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1975