Colorado PROFILES, The Colorado Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CCTSI)
Keywords
Last Name
Institution

Contact Us
If you have any questions or feedback please contact us.

Connection

Search Results to

This is a "connection" page, showing the details of why an item matched the keywords from your search.

                     
                     

One or more keywords matched the following properties of Biomechanics of Human Articular Cartilage Measured In Vivo

PropertyValue
abstract The objective of this proposal is to translate a novel, noninvasive method of measuring articular cartilage biomechanics, dualMRI, to humans. Osteoarthritis (OA) is a degenerative disease of the joint and a common orthopaedic problem, afflicting nearly 20% of the US population. The pathophysiology of OA involves a degenerative cascade in articular cartilage that disrupts normal extracellular matrix protein synthesis and increases inflammatory cytokine and enzyme expression. Articular cartilage is a zonal tissue whose biomechanical function is sensitive to degeneration. Specifically, proteoglycan breakdown and loss of structural integrity alters the three dimensional (3D) strain patterns within the tissue during mechanical loading. The development of emerging biological therapies and management strategies, including gene therapy, injection of prophylactic proteins, and stem and autologous cell implantation, are currently limited by a lack of a suitable, noninvasive method of measuring the biomechanical function of cartilage in humans. We developed dualMRI (displacements under applied loading by MRI) as a solution to the need for an imaging biomarker that noninvasively characterizes the biomechanical functional of musculoskeletal tissues following therapy. We propose to establish a working protocol for in vivo dualMRI in human volunteers using custom mechanical loading methods and MRI pulse sequences. We will pursue two related specific aims. In Aim 1, we will quantify 3D patterns of articular cartilag strain by dualMRI in human volunteers. In Aim 2, we will correlate dualMRI strains and quantitative MRI (qMRI) measures in articular cartilage. If successful, we will establish a new tool for the noninvasive, in vivo, functional biomechanical assessment of articular cartilage. This work will provide the musculoskeletal research community with (a) a clinical diagnostic tool to evaluate efficacy of therapeutic agents to target early degeneration in animal and human trials, (b) the ability to functionally evaluate cartilage healing and repair with emerging therapies, (c) baseline data describing the healthy function of human cartilage in vivo, and (d) a platform technology to more broadly study biomechanical function of load-bearing tissues (e.g. meniscus, ligament) in vivo.
label Biomechanics of Human Articular Cartilage Measured In Vivo

Search Criteria
  • biomechanics

Copyright © 2024 The Regents of the University of Colorado, a body corporate. All rights reserved. (Harvard PROFILES RNS software version: 2.11.1)