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New Method to Repair Injured Bones

New Method to Repair Injured Bones

Reported March 11, 2010

(Ivanhoe Newswire) — A husband and wife research team has found a way to use the periosteum, the sleeve-like cover on bone, to heal serious bone injuries. Moreover, they have developed an artificial sleeve that spurs fast healing when a car wreck, bomb blast or disease destroys the bone covering.

Melissa Knothe Tate, a joint professor of biomedical engineering and mechanical & aerospace engineering at Case Western Reserve University, and Dr. Ulf Knothe, an orthopedic surgeon at the Cleveland Clinic, used a new technique on a wheelchair-bound patient who suffered from cerebral palsy, hip dysplasia and a curved spine exacerbated by legs of differing length.

To lengthen her shorter leg while correcting her hip dysplasia, Knothe replaced the hip joint with a long-stemmed prosthesis, in the process cutting and spreading the femur to match the length of its mate. Around the newly-created gap in the femur, he left a section of the periosteum, the bone’s sleeve-like cover, intact to envelop and heal the gap.

Inside the sleeve, bone grew and matured around the prosthesis stem. The patient has since learned to walk again.

“The sock-like sheath on the outside of the bone is a habitat for stem cells,” Knothe Tate was quoted as saying.

 

 

In testing involving sheep in Switzerland, animals that had the periosteum operation to bridge a one-inch gap in their legs stood within 24 hours and had substantial bone filling the gap within two weeks. In the lab, Knothe Tate and fellow researchers found that direct and angular pressure on stem cells from periosteum stimulated the cells to develop into bone. They say they believe the pressure of standing and shifting weight drove the bone growth in the sheep.

“Just like in the embryo, given the right trigger, the cells build bone like crazy,” said Knothe Tate.

She tested the periosteum process against the standard bone graft technique of packing the gap with spongy bone taken from the pelvis and included a third model in which the gap was packed with spongy bone and covered with periosteum. The results showed the periosteum alone healed fastest and with the greatest density. “Surprisingly,” she said, “including the bone graft slowed the healing process.”

In addition to yielding better results, the surgical procedure is simpler for the doctor and patient — no small matter. Of the nearly 8 million bone fractures that occur in the U.S. annually, about 1.5 million result in bone grafting operations.

Compared to the process called distraction osteogenesis, which uses pins inserted through the skin and into two lengths of bone to pull them together and bridge a large gap, the perisoteum procedure is far less invasive and less likely to result in infection and other complications.

Knothe, who has worked with patients suffering bone cancer or bone loss from traumatic injuries, knows that sometimes there is not enough periosteum to make a sleeve.

 

 

With support from the Case-Coulter Translational Research Program, the couple designed an artificial periosteum, and Knothe Tate produced the novel implant, a sleeve made of materials approved by the Food & Drug Administration for other treatments. In sheep testing, collagen and cells scraped from periosteum, and pieces of periosteum were tucked into the artificial sleeves. Sheep treated with pieces of periosteum healed fastest, followed by those with collagen and cells.

“The next step is to bring the technology to the clinic, to broaden its access to the general public beyond the top clinics, for example, for patients relying on hospitals in rural areas, as well as for soldiers injured on the battlefield,” said Knothe. “You can sterilize the membrane in an autoclave, along with the surgical tools. Its modular design makes it easily adaptable to a variety of clinical situations.”

SOURCE: Presented at the annual meeting of the Orthopedic Research Society, New Orleans, LA, March 5, 2010

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