TY - THES A1 - Kupczyk, Eva Katharina T1 - Charakterisierung von Zellen aus dem vorderen Kreuzband nach Vorderer- Kreuzband-Ruptur im Hinblick auf das Rupturalter T1 - Characterisation of cells isolated from the ruptured anterior cruciate ligament in regard to the time since rupture N2 - Die Vordere Kreuzband (VKB)-Ruptur ist eine häufige Verletzung, welche eine hohe individuelle und sozioökonomische Belastung verursacht. Eine etablierte Therapie ist die VKB-Plastik, problematisch sind jedoch die hohen Rerupturraten nach operativer Versorgung. In der Annahme, dass Mesenchymale Stammzellen (MSC) eine bedeutende Rolle für die Heilung spielen, sollte in der vorliegenden Arbeit untersucht werden, ob ein Zusammenhang zwischen Zahl und Qualität der aus dem VKB isolierten MSC sowie der Latenz zwischen Ruptur und Rekonstruktion besteht und so ein optimaler Therapiezeitraum eingegrenzt werden kann. Zunächst erfolgte die Zellisolierung aus intraoperativ gewonnenen VKB-Biopsien. Je nach Latenz zwischen Ruptur und Operation wurden drei Gruppen (akute ≙ ≤ 30 d, subakute ≙ 31-90 d, verzögerte Rekonstruktion ≙ > 90 d) gebildet. Zum Nachweis von MSC wurden die Zellen hinsichtlich ihrer Plastikadhärenz, eines multipotenten Differenzierungspotentials sowie eines spezifischen Oberflächenantigenmusters (CD73+, CD90+, CD105+, CD34-) untersucht. Zudem wurde ihr Einflusses auf die biomechanischen und histologischen Eigenschaften eines analysiert. Der Nachweis von MSC war in allen Gruppen möglich. Das Proliferationspotential war in Gruppe II am größten, ebenso der Anteil der MSC an allen Zellen. Er war 5,4% (4,6% - 6,3%, 95% CI; p < 0,001) höher als in Gruppe I und 18,9% (18,2% - 19,6%, 95% CI; p < 0,001) höher als in Gruppe III. In den mit Zellen kultivierten Bandkonstrukten konnte im Gegensatz zu zellfreien Konstrukten humanes Kollagen I nachgewiesen werden. Die Stabilität nahm bei Kultivierung mit Zellen ab. Die Ergebnisse legen nahe, dass das Regenerationspotential bei subakuter VKB-Rekonstruktion (31-90 d) am höchsten ist. Potenziell ursächlich sind die Regeneration hemmende Entzündungsprozesse zu Beginn sowie degenerative Prozesse im längerfristigen Verlauf. Zudem konnte gezeigt werden, dass die isolierten Zellen die Eigenschaften eines Bandkonstruktes durch Bildung von Kollagen I und Reduktion der Stabilität im kurzfristigen Verlauf verändern und dementsprechend den Therapieerfolg beeinflussen könnten. Zur Verifizierung der Ergebnisse bedarf es weiterer Untersuchungen. N2 - A ruptured Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) can significantly impact an individual’s health and cause great socioeconomic repercussions. Despite a well-established surgical treatment, the rate of secondary rupture remains high. Previous research has highlighted the important role of Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSC) in ligament regeneration. This study sets out to analyse possible correlations between the quality and quantity of MSC and the time between rupture and repair, and thus defining the optimal time for surgery. Cells were isolated from ACL biopsies gained intraoperatively. Three groups (acute ≙ ≤ 30d, subacute ≙ 31-90d and delayed reconstruction ≙ > 90d) were defined based on the time from trauma to surgery. To prove the presence of MSC the cells were analysed for proliferative capacity, adherence to plastic, multilineage differentiation potential, as well as the presence of specific surface antigens (CD73+, CD90+, CD105+ and CD34-). The cells’ ability to support healing was assessed through biomechanical tests and histological analysis of ligament models created using isolated ACL cells and a rat collagen type I-based scaffold. Cells that fulfil MSC criteria were isolated in all three groups. In the subacute reconstruction group the proportion of cells which fulfilled the criteria was 5.4% (4,6% - 6,3%, 95% CI; p < 0,001) higher than in the acute reconstruction group and 18.9% (18,2% - 19,6%, 95% CI; p < 0,001) higher than in the delayed reconstruction group. Human collagen I could be isolated in ligament models cultivated using ACL cells. However, the stability of the ligament models decreased after cell cultivation. The results described above suggest that the potential for regeneration is highest in the subacute reconstruction group. This may be because the post traumatic inflammation slows regeneration, while degenerative processes set in in the weeks to months following the rupture. The fact that the presence of human collagen I in the ligament models was associated with decreased stability suggests that the concentration of MSC can affect the surgical outcome. More research into the subject is required to further explore these preliminary findings. KW - Ligamentum cruciatum anterius KW - Tissue Engineering KW - Zellkultur KW - Kollagen KW - Stammzelle KW - Mesenchymale Stammzellen KW - Vorderes Kreuzband KW - Anterior Cruciate Ligament KW - Mesenchymal Stem Cell KW - colllagen Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-280568 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Paul, Mila M. A1 - Mieden, Hannah J. A1 - Lefering, Rolf A1 - Kupczyk, Eva K. A1 - Jordan, Martin C. A1 - Gilbert, Fabian A1 - Meffert, Rainer H. A1 - Sirén, Anna-Leena A1 - Hoelscher-Doht, Stefanie T1 - Impact of a femoral fracture on outcome after traumatic brain injury — a matched-pair analysis of the TraumaRegister DGU\(^®\) JF - Journal of Clinical Medicine N2 - Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the leading cause of death and disability in polytrauma and is often accompanied by concomitant injuries. We conducted a retrospective matched-pair analysis of data from a 10-year period from the multicenter database TraumaRegister DGU\(^®\) to analyze the impact of a concomitant femoral fracture on the outcome of TBI patients. A total of 4508 patients with moderate to critical TBI were included and matched by severity of TBI, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) risk classification, initial Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), age, and sex. Patients who suffered combined TBI and femoral fracture showed increased mortality and worse outcome at the time of discharge, a higher chance of multi-organ failure, and a rate of neurosurgical intervention. Especially those with moderate TBI showed enhanced in-hospital mortality when presenting with a concomitant femoral fracture (p = 0.037). The choice of fracture treatment (damage control orthopedics vs. early total care) did not impact mortality. In summary, patients with combined TBI and femoral fracture have higher mortality, more in-hospital complications, an increased need for neurosurgical intervention, and inferior outcome compared to patients with TBI solely. More investigations are needed to decipher the pathophysiological consequences of a long-bone fracture on the outcome after TBI. KW - traumatic brain injury KW - femoral fracture KW - damage control orthopedics KW - mortality Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-319363 SN - 2077-0383 VL - 12 IS - 11 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Heilig, Philipp A1 - Faerber, Lars-Christopher A1 - Paul, Mila M. A1 - Kupczyk, Eva A1 - Meffert, Rainer H. A1 - Jordan, Martin C. A1 - Hoelscher-Doht, Stefanie T1 - Plate osteosynthesis combined with bone cement provides the highest stability for tibial head depression fractures under high loading conditions JF - Scientific Reports N2 - Older patients sustaining tibial head depression fractures often cannot follow the post-operative rehabilitation protocols with partial weight-bearing of the affected limb, leading to osteosynthesis failure, cartilage step-off and arthritis development. Therefore, the aim of this study was to analyse the biomechanical performance of different types of osteosyntheses alone and in combination with bone cement simulating cyclically high loading conditions of tibial head depression fractures. Lateral tibial head depression fractures (AO: 41-B2.2; Schatzker type III) were created in synthetic bones and stabilized using three different osteosyntheses alone and in combination with a commonly used bone cement (chronOS™): 2 screws, 4 screws in the jail technique and a lateral angle-stable buttress plate. After fixation, the lateral tibial plateau was axially loaded in two, from each other independent testing series: In the first test protocol, 5000 cycles with 500 N and in the end load-to-failure tests were performed. In the second test protocol, the cyclic loading was increased to 1000 N. Parameters of interest were the displacement of the articular fracture fragment, the stiffness and the maximum load. The osteosyntheses revealed a higher stiffness in combination with bone cement compared to the same type of osteosynthesis alone (e.g., 500 N level: 2 screws 383 ± 43 N/mm vs. 2 screws + chronOs 520 ± 108 N/mm, increase by 36%, p < 0.01; 4 screws 368 ± 97 N/mm vs. 4 screws + chronOS 516 ± 109 N/mm, increase by 40%, p < 0.01; plate: 509 ± 73 N/mm vs. plate + chronOs 792 ± 150 N/mm, increase by 56%, p < 0.01). Bone cement reduced the displacement of the plate significantly (500 N level: plate: 8.9 ± 2.8 mm vs. plate + chronOs: 3.1 ± 1.4 mm, reduction by 65%, p < 0.01; 1000 N level: 16.9 ± 3.6 mm vs 5.6 ± 1.3 mm, reduction by 67%, p < 0.01). Thus, the highest stiffness and lowest displacement values were found when using the plate with bone cement in both loading conditions (500 N level: 2 screws + chronOs 3.7 ± 1.3 mm, 4 screws + chronOs 6.2 ± 2.4 mm; 1000 N level: 2 screws + chronOs 6.5 ± 1.2 mm, 4 screws + chronOs 5.7 ± 0.8 mm). From a biomechanical perspective, plate osteosynthesis of tibial head depression fractures should always be combined with bone cement, provides higher stability than 2-screw and 4-screw fixation and is a valid treatment option in cases where extraordinary stability is required. KW - head depression fractures KW - osteosynthesis KW - arthritis Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-299782 VL - 12 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jordan, Martin C. A1 - Hufnagel, Lukas A1 - McDonogh, Miriam A1 - Paul, Mila M. A1 - Schmalzl, Jonas A1 - Kupczyk, Eva A1 - Jansen, Hendrik A1 - Heilig, Philipp A1 - Meffert, Rainer H. A1 - Hoelscher-Doht, Stefanie T1 - Surgical fixation of calcaneal beak fractures — biomechanical analysis of different osteosynthesis techniques JF - Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology N2 - The calcaneal beak fracture is a rare avulsion fracture of the tuber calcanei characterized by a solid bony fragment at the Achilles tendon insertion. Treatment usually requires osteosynthesis. However, lack of biomechanical understanding of the ideal fixation technique persists. A beak fracture was simulated in synthetic bones and assigned to five different groups of fixation: A) 6.5-mm partial threaded cannulated screws, B) 4.0-mm partial threaded cannulated screws, C) 5.0-mm headless cannulated compression screws, D) 2.3-mm locking plate, and E) 2.8-mm locking plate. Different traction force levels were applied through an Achilles tendon surrogate in a material-testing machine on all stabilized synthetic bones. Outcome measures were peak-to-peak displacement, total displacement, plastic deformation, stiffness, visual-fracture-line displacement, and mode of implant failure. The 2.3- and 2.8-mm plating groups showed a high drop-out rate at 100 N tension force and failed under higher tension levels of 200 N. The fracture fixation using 4.0-mm partial threaded screws showed a significantly higher repair strength and was able to withhold cyclic loading up to 300 N. The lowest peak-to-peak displacement and the highest load-to-failure and stiffness were provided by fracture fixation using 6.5-mm partial threaded cannulated screws or 5.0-mm headless cannulated compression screws. As anticipated, large 6.5-mm screw diameters provide the best biomechanical fixation. Surprisingly, the 5.0-mm headless cannulated compression screws yield reliable stability despite the absent screw head and washer. When such large screws cannot be applied, 4.0-mm screws also allow reasonable fixation strength. Plate fixation should be implemented with precaution and in combination with a restrictive postoperative motion protocol. Finally, clinical cases about the surgical application and recovery are included. KW - foot KW - ankle KW - Achilles KW - tendon KW - fracture Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-282792 SN - 2296-4185 VL - 10 ER -