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Concerning the ultrastructural origin of large-scale swelling in articular cartilage
Author(s) -
MinHuey Chen,
Neil D. Broom
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
american journal of anatomy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1553-0795
pISSN - 0002-9106
DOI - 10.1017/s0021878299004872
Subject(s) - swelling , matrix (chemical analysis) , context (archaeology) , articular cartilage , materials science , ultrastructure , cartilage , anatomy , chemistry , biophysics , composite material , geology , pathology , osteoarthritis , biology , medicine , paleontology , alternative medicine
The swelling behaviour of the general matrix of both normal and abnormally softened articular cartilage was investigated in the context of its relationship to the underlying subchondral bone, the articular surface, and with respect to the primary structural directions represented in its strongly anisotropic collagenous architecture. Swelling behaviours were compared by subjecting tissue specimens under different modes of constraint to a high swelling bathing solution of distilled water and comparing structural changes imaged at the macroscopic, microscopic and ultrastructural levels of resolution. Near zero swelling was observed in the isolated normal general matrix with minimal structural change. By contrast the similarly isolated softened general matrix exhibited large-scale swelling in both the transverse and radial directions. This difference in dimensional stability was attributed to fundamentally different levels of fibril interconnectivity between the 2 matrices. A model of structural transformation is proposed to accommodate fibrillar rearrangements associated with the large-scale swelling in the radial and transverse directions in the softened general matrix.

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