Biomaterials, Biodegradables and Biomimetics Research Group

Papers in Scientific Journals

Biomechanical and Cellular Segmental Characterization of Human Meniscus: Building the Basis for Tissue Engineering Therapies

Abstract

Objective

To overcome current limitations of Tissue Engineering (TE) strategies, deeper comprehension on meniscus biology is required. This study aims to combine biomechanical segmental analysis of fresh human meniscus tissues and its correlation with architectural and cellular characterization.

Method

Morphologically intact menisci, from 44 live donors were studied after division into three radial segments. Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) was performed at physiological-like conditions. Micro-computed tomography (CT) analysis of freeze-dried samples assessed micro-structure. Flow cytometry, histology and histomorphometry were used for cellular study and quantification.

Results

Anterior segments present significantly higher damping properties.

Mid body fresh medial meniscus presents higher values of E′ compared to lateral. Cyclic loads influence the viscoelastic behavior of menisci. By increasing the frequency leads to an increase in stiffness. Conversely, with increasing frequencies, the capacity to dissipate energy and damping properties initially decrease and then rise again.

Age and gender directly correlate with higher E’ and tan δ. Micro-CT analysis revealed that mean porosity was 55.5 (21.2–89.8)% and 64.7 (47.7–81.8)% for freeze-dried lateral and medial meniscus, respectively. Predominant cells are positive for CD44, CD73, CD90 and CD105, and lack CD31, CD34 and CD45 (present in smaller populations). Histomorphometry revealed that cellularity decreases from vascular zone 1 to zone 3. Anterior segments of lateral and medial meniscus have inferior cellularity as compared to mid body and posterior ones.

Conclusion

Menisci are not uniform structures. Anterior segments have lower cellularity and higher damping. Cyclic loads influence viscoelastic characteristics. Future TE therapies should consider segmental architecture, cellularity and biomechanics of fresh tissue.

Journal
Osteoarthritis and Cartilage
Volume
22
Issue
9
Pagination
1271-1281
Publisher
ELSEVIER
URL
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25038489
Keywords
DMA (dynamic mechanical analysis), Flow cytometry, Histomorphometry, meniscus, Micro-computed tomography, Tissue engineering
Rights
Restricted Access
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Status
published
Project
OsteoCart
Year of Publication
2014
DOI
10.1016/j.joca.2014.07.001
Date Published
2014-07-17
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