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      Microfracture: Surgical Technique and Rehabilitation to Treat Chondral Defects

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          Abstract

          Full-thickness articular cartilage defects rarely heal spontaneously. Some patients may not have clinically significant problems from chondral defects, but most eventually have degenerative changes. Techniques to treat chondral defects include abrasion, drilling, autografts, allografts, and cell transplantation. The senior author (JRS) developed the microfracture technique to enhance chondral resurfacing by providing a suitable environment for new tissue formation and taking advantage of the body's own healing potential. Microfracture has been done in more than 1800 patients. Specially designed awls are used to make multiple perforations, or microfractures, into the subchondral bone plate. Perforations are made as close together as possible, but not so close that one breaks into another. They usually are approximately 3 to 4 mm apart. The integrity of the subchondral bone plate must be maintained. The released marrow elements (including mesenchymal stem cells, growth factors, and other healing proteins) form a surgically induced super clot that provides an enriched environment for new tissue formation. The rehabilitation program is crucial to optimize the results of the surgery. It promotes the ideal physical environment for the marrow mesenchymal stem cells to differentiate into articular cartilagelike cells, ultimately leading to development of a durable repair cartilage that fills the original defect.

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          Most cited references12

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          Treatment of Deep Cartilage Defects in the Knee with Autologous Chondrocyte Transplantation

          New England Journal of Medicine, 331(14), 889-895
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            Composition and dynamics of articular cartilage: structure, function, and maintaining healthy state.

            Disorders of articular cartilage represent some of the most common and debilitating diseases encountered in orthopaedic practice. Understanding the normal functioning of articular cartilage is a prerequisite to understanding its pathologic processes. The mechanical properties of articular cartilage arise from the complex structure and interactions of its biochemical constituents: mostly water, electrolytes, and a solid matrix composed primarily of collagen and proteoglycan. The viscoelastic properties of cartilage, due primarily to fluid flow through the solid matrix, can explain much of the deformational responses observed under many loading conditions. Degenerative processes can often be explained by a breakdown of the normal load-bearing capacity of cartilage which arises from the mechanics of this fluid flow. Several factors which may lead to such a breakdown include direct trauma to the cartilage, obesity, immobilization, and excessive repetitive loading of the cartilage. Sports activity, without traumatic injury, does not appear to be a risk factor for the development of osteoarthritis in the normal joint; however, such activity may be harmful to an abnormal joint.
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              Microfracture technique forfull-thickness chondral defects: Technique and clinical results

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research
                Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                0009-921X
                2001
                October 2001
                : 391
                : S362-S369
                Article
                10.1097/00003086-200110001-00033
                11603719
                c617e10e-1a40-42c8-bbed-bf21f9144262
                © 2001
                History

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