Detalles del proyecto
Description
DESCRIPTION (Adapted from investigator's abstract): The goal of the
proposed research is to examine the initiation and progression of
osteoarthritic lesions on the glenohumeral joint surfaces with respect
to three distinct phases which describe the natural development of early
lesions at the glenohumeral joint. The three phases are: 1) Pre-
Osteoarthritic Initiation (Normal Glenohumeral joints) - differences
exist in tensile properties of humeral head and glenoid cartilage; 2)
Osteoarthritic Initiation Phase -incongruency and excessive humeral head
translation produce abnormal contact areas and contact stresses; 3)
Osteoarthritic Progression Phase - mismatched articulations damage normal
load support mechanism by interstitial fluid pressurization and damage
humeral head cartilage; 4) Iatrogenic changes in the glenohumeral joint
articulation - surgical tightening of joint capsule produces abnormal
contact areas and contact stresses. Each phase will be examined by
evaluating visual changes; joint geometry; contact areas and translation
during joint motion; tensile, compressive, shear and permeability
properties of cartilage at the joint; and three-dimensional finite
element analysis of contact stresses correlated with experimental data.
The present proposal is an inter-institutional collaborative project
between Columbia and Rensselaer and involves the efforts of five senior
investigators in biomechanics, finite element analysis, and orthopaedic
surgery. In this A2 application, all previously proposed studies
regarding patient evaluations, synovial fluid markers, cartilage
biochemistry and MRIs have been removed. The study is now narrowly
focused on biomechanical testing of 120 glenohumeral joints over four
years using experimental methods that have been validated in preliminary
studies. The proposal is aimed at understanding a major clinical entity,
osteoarthritis of the glenohumeral joint, where there is a dearth of
basic scientific effort. It also represents the first attempt to
biomechanically test the hypothesis that a correlation exists between
regions of high contact stresses and specific sites of cartilage lesions.
Estado | Finalizado |
---|---|
Fecha de inicio/Fecha fin | 3/15/96 → 7/1/01 |
Financiación
- National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases
Keywords
- Biofísica
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