50 results on '"Horst Claassen"'
Search Results
2. Lippen, Mundhöhle und Pharynx – Anatomie, physiologische Grundlagen und Diagnostik
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Thomas Hummel, Bettina Schönweiler, Johann-Martin Hempel, Josef G. Heckmann, Sotirios Bisdas, Rainer Müller, Rainer Schönweiler, Frank Waldfahrer, Michael Reiß, Friedrich Paulsen, and Horst Claassen
- Abstract
Die Gestalt der Lippen geht auf die Herkunft aus verschiedenen Gesichtswulsten zuruck (4. Embryonalwoche).
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- 2021
3. Larynx – Anatomie, physiologische Grundlagen und Diagnostik
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Rainer Schönweiler, Claus Pototschnig, Sotirios Bisdas, Bettina Schönweiler, Rainer Müller, Friedrich Paulsen, Horst Claassen, and Johann-Martin Hempel
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Die obere Halfte des Zungenbeins inkl. kleines Zungenbeinhorn gehen aus dem 2. Kiemenbogen (Hyoidbogen, Reichert-Knorpel) hervor.
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- 2021
4. Kopfspeicheldrüsen – Anatomie, physiologische Grundlagen und Diagnostik
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Manfred Rauh, Friedrich Paulsen, Heinrich Iro, Markus Jungehülsing, Johann-Martin Hempel, Johannes Zenk, Sotirios Bisdas, and Horst Claassen
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Die Speicheldrusen entstehen in der 6. und 7. Embryonalwoche als Epithelsprossen aus der ektodermalen Mundbucht.
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- 2021
5. Äußerer Hals und Halsweichteile – Anatomie, physiologische Grundlagen und Diagnostik
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Sotirios Bisdas, Friedrich Paulsen, Horst Claassen, Sören Wenzel, and Johann-Martin Hempel
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- 2021
6. N. facialis – Anatomie, physiologische Grundlagen und Diagnostik
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Friedrich Paulsen, Randolf Riemann, Johann-Martin Hempel, Horst Claassen, and Sotirios Bisdas
- Abstract
Der VII. Hirnnerv hat als Nerv des 2. Kiemenbogens (Hyoidbogen, Reichert-Knorpel) 2 Anteile: N. facialis, N. intermedius → Bezeichnung als N. facialis oder N. intermediofacialis Der N. facialis innerviert die mimische Muskulatur und andere aus dem 2. Kiemenbogen hervorgegangene Muskeln Verlauf des N. facialis: Kerngebiet in der Rautengrube → Wurzelfasern winden sich um den Kern des VI. Hirnnervs (inneres Fazialisknie) → Austritt im Kleinhirnbruckenwinkel → Eintritt in das Felsenbein durch Porus und Meatus acusticus internus (zusammen mit VIII. Hirnnerv) → horizontaler Verlauf bis zum Ggl. geniculi (auseres Fazialisknie) → Abknickung nach kaudal → weiterer Verlauf im knochernen Fazialiskanal (Canalis Fallopii) der medialen Paukenhohlenwand → Austritt am Foramen stylomastoideum N. intermedius fuhrt die sensorischen, sensiblen und parasympathischen Anteile des 2. Kiemenbogennervs
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- 2021
7. Trachea, Bronchialbaum und Mediastinum – Anatomie, physiologische Grundlagen und Diagnostik
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Kathleen Gutjahr, Horst Claassen, Sotirios Bisdas, Friedrich Paulsen, and Johann-Martin Hempel
- Abstract
26. Tag: Entwicklung des unteren Respirationstrakts nach Auftreten einer Furche (Laryngotrachealrinne) am Boden des Vorderdarms
- Published
- 2021
8. Teaching anatomy under COVID-19 conditions at German universities: recommendations of the teaching commission of the anatomical society
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Horst Claassen, Kirsten Haastert-Talini, Anja Böckers, and Jürgen Westermann
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2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Universities ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Video Recording ,Remote learning ,Commission ,German ,Political science ,Germany ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Learning ,Societies, Medical ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Teaching ,Teleworking ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,language.human_language ,Face to face learning ,language ,Online teaching ,Developmental Biology ,Computer-Assisted Instruction - Abstract
Background In this viewpoint representatives of the Teaching Commission of the Anatomical Society summarize their teaching experiences gained during the COVID-19 pandemic in the summer term of 2020 and derive first recommendations concerning face-to-face and remote teaching of anatomy for the future. Methods Representatives of the Teaching Commission of the Anatomical Society met virtually, exchanged experiences and summarized them in writing and answered a short questionnaire. Results The required transition to remote learning during summer term of 2020 was possible, but revealed technical shortcomings and major deficits concerning practical hands-on teaching. Conclusion The Teaching Commission of the Anatomical Society recommends that universities should follow the idea of as much face-to-face teaching as possible and as much online teaching as necessary for future terms.
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- 2020
9. Human Femoral Vein Diameter and Topography of Valves and Tributaries: A Post Mortem Analysis
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Horst Claassen, Andreas Wree, Jonas Keiler, and M Schulze
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Histology ,Chronic venous insufficiency ,business.industry ,Femoral vein ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Thigh ,medicine.disease ,Venous Valves ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Popliteal vein ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Implant ,Saphenofemoral junction ,Vein ,business - Abstract
The femoral vein (FV) is a clinically important vessel. Failure of its valves can lead to chronic venous insufficiency (CVI) with severe manifestations such as painful ulcers. Although they are crucial for identifying suitable implant sites for therapeutic valves, studies on the topography of FV tributaries and valves are rare. Moreover, the femoral vein diameter (FVD) must be known to assess the morphometric requirements for valve implants. To reassess the anatomical requirements for valve implants, 155 FVs from 82 human corpses were examined. FVDs and tributary and valve topographies were assessed using a laboratory straightedge. The FVD increased from 6 mm in the distal femoropopliteal vein to 11 mm in the iliofemoral vein proximal to the saphenofemoral junction (SFJ). Diameters were significantly bigger in males than females. Height correlated positively with FVD. Distal to the SFJ, within a distance of 38 cm, one to eight valves were present. Up to two valves were present within 10 cm proximal to the SFJ. Individual tributary and valve topography must be considered to ensure appropriate design and successful implantation of a venous valve for CVI therapy in the FV. A suitable implant site would be proximal to the SFJ via an infrainguinal transfemoral access. Clin. Anat. 31:1065-1076, 2018. © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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- 2018
10. Deep femoral artery: A new point of view based on cadaveric study
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M Schulze, Oliver Schmitt, Horst Claassen, and Andreas Wree
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Femoral artery ,Thigh ,Surgical Flaps ,03 medical and health sciences ,Valve replacement ,Femoral nerve ,medicine.artery ,Cadaver ,medicine ,Deep Femoral Artery ,Humans ,Circumflex ,business.industry ,Angiography ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Femoral Artery ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Inguinal ligament ,030101 anatomy & morphology ,Cadaveric spasm ,business ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Introduction In diagnostic angiographic procedures, the knowledge of arterial variations in the femoral artery (FA), deep femoral artery (DFA) and lateral and medial circumflex femoral arteries (LCFA, MCFA) has a great impact. Material and methods The frequency of branching patterns of these arteries was investigated in 111 thighs of body donors. Gender and side differences were analyzed statistically. Results The median distance of separation of the DFA from the FA in relation to the inguinal ligament (IL) was 3.29 cm. High origins (1−2 cm below IL) and middle origins (3−5 cm below IL) of the DFA were found in an equal distribution of 39.3% and 41.1%, respectively. Low origins (6−10 cm below IL) were rare (19.6%) but showed a tendential significance toward expression in males (p = 0.096). The origin of the LCFA from the FA (19.8%) or DFA (70.2%) are in line with the findings of other groups. The origin of the MCFA from FA (14.4%) or DFA (74.7%) showed that circumflex femoral arteries arose mostly from DFA. A trifurcation of the FA into the DFA, LCFA and MCFA was only observed in 9.9% and, therefore, less frequently than reported by others. Branches of the femoral nerve (FN) passed mostly anterior (46.4%) or anterior and posterior (47.8%) to the LCFA. The rare constellation of branches of FN passing only posterior to the LCFA (5.8%) showed a tendential significance to left side expression (p = 0.084). Conclusions Taken together, this is the first classification of the median distance of separation of the DFA from the FA in relation to the IL in three defined groups. The knowledge of DFA branching pattern is essential for recent therapy options of cardiac diseases using a femoral artery access: transcatheter aortic valve replacement, catheter-based miniaturized ventricular assist device and veno-arterial extracorporal membrane oxygenation. The variant topography of the branches of FN in relation to LCFA should be kept in mind when harvesting an anterolateral thigh flap.
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- 2021
11. Different Patterns of Cartilage Mineralization Analyzed by Comparison of Human, Porcine, and Bovine Laryngeal Cartilages
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Martin Schicht, Bernhard Tillmann, Friedrich Paulsen, Horst Claassen, Ralf Hillmann, Bernd Fleiner, and Sebastian Hoogeboom
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Swine ,Laryngeal cartilage ,Mineralization (biology) ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Calcification, Physiologic ,Chondrocytes ,Medizinische Fakultät ,law ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,ddc:610 ,Chemistry ,Ossification ,Vesicle ,Cartilage ,Thyroid ,Articles ,Thyroid cartilage ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Thyroid Cartilage ,Cattle ,030101 anatomy & morphology ,Anatomy ,Electron microscope ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
Laryngeal cartilages undergo a slow ossification process during aging, making them an excellent model for studying cartilage mineralization and ossification processes. Pig laryngeal cartilages are similar to their human counterparts in shape and size, also undergo mineralization, facilitating the study of cartilage mineralization. We investigated the processes of cartilage mineralization and ossification and compared these with the known processes in growth plates. Thyroid cartilages from glutaraldehyde-perfused male minipigs and from domestic pigs were used for X-ray, light microscopic, and transmission electron microscopic analyses. We applied different fixation and postfixation solutions to preserve cell shape, proteoglycans, and membranes. In contrast to the ossifying human thyroid cartilage, predominantly cartilage mineralization was observed in minipig and domestic pig thyroid cartilages. The same subset of chondrocytes responsible for growth plate mineralization is also present in thyroid cartilage mineralization. Besides mineralization mediated by matrix vesicles, a second pattern of cartilage mineralization was observed in thyroid cartilage only. Here, the formation and growth of crystals were closely related to collagen fibrils, which served as guide rails for the expansion of mineralization. It is hypothesized that the second pattern of cartilage mineralization may be similar to a maturation of mineralized cartilage after initial matrix vesicles–mediated cartilage mineralization.
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- 2017
12. Kompaktwissen Kopf- und Halsanatomie
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Horst Claassen
- Published
- 2018
13. Special pattern of endochondral ossification in human laryngeal cartilages: X-ray and light-microscopic studies on thyroid cartilage
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Friedrich Paulsen, Horst Claassen, Saadettin Sel, and Martin Schicht
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Histology ,Ossification ,business.industry ,Cartilage ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Thyroid cartilage ,Chondrogenesis ,Extracellular matrix ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Intramembranous ossification ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Cancellous bone ,Endochondral ossification - Abstract
Endochondral ossification is a process that also occurs in the skeleton of the larynx. Differences in the ossification mechanism in comparison to growth plates are not understood until now. To get deeper insights into this process, human thyroid cartilage was investigated by the use of X-rays and a series of light-microscopic stainings. A statistical analysis of mineralization was done by scanning areas of mineralized cartilage and of ossification. We detected a special mode of endochondral ossification which differs from the processes in growth plates. Thyroid cartilage ossifies very slowly and in a gender-specific manner. Compared with age-matched women, bone formation in thyroid cartilage of men is significantly higher in the age group 41-60 years. Endochondral ossification is prepared by internal changes of extracellular matrix leading to areas of asbestoid fibers with ingrowing cartilage canals. In contrast to growth plates, bone is deposited on large areas of mineralized cartilage, which appear at the rims of cartilage canals. Furthermore, primary parallel fibered bone was observed which was deposited on woven bone. The predominant bone type is cancellous bone with trabeculae, whereas compact bone with Haversian systems was seldom found. Trabeculae contain a great number of reversal and arresting lines meaning that the former were often reconstructed and that bone formation was arrested and resumed again with advancing age. It is hypothesized that throughout life trabeculae of ossified thyroid cartilage undergo adaptation to different loads due to the use of voice.
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- 2014
14. Variation in the hypothenar muscles and its impact on ulnar tunnel syndrome
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Andreas Wree, Horst Claassen, M Schulze, and Oliver Schmitt
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Severity of Illness Index ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Antebrachial fascia ,Retinaculum ,Forearm ,Risk Factors ,medicine.artery ,Ulnar tunnel syndrome ,Cadaver ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Ulnar nerve ,Ulnar Nerve ,Ulnar artery ,business.industry ,Dissection ,Anatomy ,Decompression, Surgical ,Hand ,musculoskeletal system ,medicine.disease ,Ulnar Nerve Compression Syndromes ,Musculoskeletal Abnormalities ,Surgery ,body regions ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Muscles of the hand ,Deep fascia ,business - Abstract
Compression of the ulnar nerve at Guyon's canal can be caused not only by tumor-like structures, a fibrotic arch, a ganglion, lipoma, aneurysm or thrombosis but also by anomalous hypothenar muscles which are reviewed here. For the search of relevant papers, PubMed and crucial anatomical textbooks were consulted. The abductor digiti minimi is the most variable hypothenar muscle. It can possess one to three muscle bellies. Additional heads can arise from the flexor retinaculum, the palmaris longus tendon, the pronator quadratus tendon or the deep fascia of the palmar side of the forearm. Our own case of an aberrant abductor digiti minimi appearing like connective tissue and originating in the antebrachial fascia is included here. Hematoxylin and eosin staining revealed that macroscopically non-muscle-like tissue contained skeletal muscle tissue. The muscle itself resembled other described cases. In addition, at the flexor digiti minimi accessory heads with origin from the flexor retinaculum, the antebrachial fascia or the long flexor muscles of the forearm can be detected. By contrast, the opponens digiti minimi mostly lacks variations and is sometimes missing. In our opinion, this is due to its hidden location. However, in few cases an additional head can arise from the lower arm aponeurosis. Furthermore, additional (fourth) hypothenar muscles might be expressed. These muscles are characterized by origins in the forearm and insertions on the head of the 5th metacarpal bone or on the 5th proximal phalanx. It must be noted that accessory hypothenar muscles might look like connective tissue at first glance. Often their origin extends to the antebrachial fascia. This can be explained by the phylogenetic fact that all intrinsic muscles of the hand are derived from muscle masses that originated in the forearm. In the opinion of several authors, ulnar nerve compression mostly is evoked by hyper trophied variant hypothenar muscles due to overuse as for example in carpenters. In some rare cases, an aberrant hypothenar muscle can also evoke median nerve compression.
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- 2013
15. Variations in brachial plexus with respect to concomitant accompanying aberrant arm arteries
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Horst Claassen, M Schulze, Andreas Wree, and Oliver Schmitt
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Musculocutaneous nerve ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Axillary artery ,Cadaver ,medicine.artery ,Medicine ,Humans ,Brachial Plexus ,Radial nerve ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Plexus ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Arteries ,Median nerve ,Arm ,Coracobrachialis ,Female ,030101 anatomy & morphology ,business ,Brachial plexus ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Introduction Variations in the brachial plexus are the rule rather than the exception. This fact is of special interest for the anesthetist when planning axillary block of brachial plexus. Material and methods 167 cadaver arms were evaluated for variations in brachial plexus, with focus on the cords of the plexus, the loop of the median nerve, and the course of the median, musculocutaneous, ulnar, axillary and radial nerves. In addition, concomitant arterial variations were recorded. Results In 167 arms, variations were detected in 60 cases (36%). With 46 arms (28%) most variations concern the median nerve, followed by 13 cases (8%) which involved the musculocutaneous nerve. Ulnar, axillary and radial nerve variations were rare, amounting to 1.2% for each nerve. In median nerve conditions with a shifted loop of median nerve (12%), a hidden position of the loop or a hidden course of the beginning median nerve (8%) and a doubled loop of median nerve (17%) were observed. In musculocutaneous nerve conditions with a non-perforated coracobrachialis (1.8%), a doubled origin of the nerve (1.2%) and a giving back of branches to the median nerve (1.8%) were noted. Variations in ulnar, axillary and radial nerves concerned lower than normal diameters. Conclusions It must be stressed that cases which showed a hidden position or a doubled expression of the loop of the median nerve, a hidden course of its beginning and variable interconnections between musculocutaneous and median nerves are of special interest for anesthetists and surgeons. Hence, it is important to note that variations of arm arteries can be associated with brachial plexus variations. For example, a common trunk of axillary artery followed by a hidden loop and course of the median nerve may result in incomplete axillary block of brachial plexus.
- Published
- 2016
16. 17β-estradiol reduces expression of MMP-1, -3, and -13 in human primary articular chondrocytes from female patients cultured in a three dimensional alginate system
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Joachim Hassenpflug, Christoph Jan Wruck, Horst Claassen, Deike Varoga, Reinhard Steffen, Thomas Pufe, and Lars Ove Brandenburg
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Cartilage, Articular ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Adolescent ,Knee Joint ,Alginates ,Immunocytochemistry ,Cell Culture Techniques ,Type II collagen ,Estrogen receptor ,Osteoarthritis ,Matrix metalloproteinase ,Matrix (biology) ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Young Adult ,Chondrocytes ,Glucuronic Acid ,In vivo ,Spheroids, Cellular ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Cells, Cultured ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Estradiol ,Chemistry ,Hexuronic Acids ,Estrogens ,Tissue Inhibitor of Metalloproteinases ,Cell Biology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,Metalloproteases ,Female ,Hip Joint ,Type I collagen - Abstract
Clinical observations have suggested a relationship between osteoarthritis and a changed sex-hormone metabolism, especially in menopausal women. This study analyzes the effect of 17β-estradiol on expression of matrix metalloproteinases-1, -3, -13 (MMP-1, -3, -13) and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases-1, -2 (TIMP-1, -2) in articular chondrocytes. An imbalance of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) specialized on degradation of articular cartilage matrix over the respective inhibitors of these enzymes (TIMPs) that leads to matrix destruction was postulated in the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis. Primary human articular chondrocytes from patients of both genders were cultured in alginate beads at 5% O(2) to which 10(-11)M-10(-5)M 17β-estradiol had been added and analyzed by means of immunohistochemistry, immunocytochemistry and real-time RT-PCR. Since articular chondrocytes in vivo are adapted to a low oxygen tension, culture was performed at 5% O(2). Immunohistochemical staining in articular cartilage tissue from patients and immunocytochemical staining in articular chondrocytes cultured in alginate beads was positive for type II collagen, estrogen receptor α, MMP-1, and -13. It was negative for type I collagen, MMP-3, TIMP-1 and -2. Using real-time RT-PCR, it was demonstrated that physiological and supraphysiological doses of 17β-estradiol suppress mRNA levels of MMP-3 and -13 significantly in articular chondrocytes of female patients. A significant suppressing effect was also seen in MMP-1 mRNA after a high dose of 10(-5)M 17β-estradiol. Furthermore, high doses of this hormone led to tendentially lower TIMP-1 levels whereas the TIMP-2 mRNA level was not influenced. In male patients, only incubations with high doses (10(-5)M) of 17β-estradiol were followed by a tendency to suppressed MMP-1 and TIMP-1 levels while TIMP-2 mRNA level was decreased significantly. There was no effect on MMP-13 expression of cells from male patients. Taken together, application of 17β-estradiol in physiological doses will improve the imbalance between the amounts of MMPs and TIMPs in articular chondrocytes from female patients. Downregulation of TIMP-2 by 17β-estradiol in male patients would not be articular cartilage protective.
- Published
- 2010
17. Superficial arm arteries revisited: Brother and sister with absent radial pulse
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Doreen Werner, Andreas Wree, Oliver Schmitt, Horst Claassen, Jens-Christian Kröger, and Wolfgang Schareck
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Brachial Artery ,Median artery ,Functional Laterality ,Musculocutaneous nerve ,Young Adult ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Humans ,Radial artery ,Brachial artery ,Ulnar artery ,business.industry ,Dissection ,Siblings ,General Medicine ,Cubital fossa ,Anatomy ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Median nerve ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Radial Artery ,Female ,business ,Developmental Biology ,Artery - Abstract
Summary Atypical or superficial courses of arteries of the arm may cause accidents in therapeutic and surgical procedures. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed in a female patient and her brother. In addition, 109 cadaver arms were evaluated for superficial arm arteries and relevant vessels were measured with a calliper. In the patient and her brother the distal radial artery was absent in the normal position. Magnetic resonance imaging showed an artery surrounding the distal radius that nourished the dorsal and palmar hand. In addition, a strongly developed median artery was expressed in the patient’s brother. It is noteworthy that the female patient suffered from occasional hand pain while her brother did not, which is likely due to the additional expression of a median artery. A high origin of radial artery is found 3.67% of the examined cadavers and can be followed by additional vessels nourishing the biceps brachii or by connections to the brachial artery in the cubital fossa. Superficial ulnar arteries were detected in 1.83% of the cadavers, in both instances accompanied by an absent palmaris longus. Additionally, in one case the fork of the median nerve has moved distally and took its lateral fork from musculocutaneous nerve. In conclusion, family members can bear identical arterial variations as has been observed in the patient’s brother. High origin of radial artery and superficial ulnar artery can be accompanied by additional variations concerning vessels, muscles or nerves which have to be considered in the context of invasive and surgical procedures.
- Published
- 2010
18. Trefoil factor 3 is induced during degenerative and inflammatory joint disease, activates matrix metalloproteinases, and enhances apoptosis of articular cartilage chondrocytes
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Jörg Brandt, Fabian Garreis, Saadettin Sel, Horst Claassen, David Wohlrab, Deike Varoga, Ute Schulze, Brigitte Müller-Hilke, Martin Schicht, Tobias Haase, Mary B. Goldring, Sophie Rösler, Dagmar Riemann, and Friedrich Paulsen
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Cartilage, Articular ,Male ,Trefoil Factors ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,DNA, Complementary ,Blotting, Western ,Immunology ,Apoptosis ,Osteoarthritis ,Matrix metalloproteinase ,Chondrocyte ,Cell Line ,Mice ,Chondrocytes ,Rheumatology ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Aggrecan ,Arthritis, Infectious ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Trefoil factor 3 ,Chemistry ,Cartilage ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Matrix Metalloproteinases ,Recombinant Proteins ,Up-Regulation ,Cell biology ,Enzyme Activation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,Joint Diseases ,Trefoil Factor-3 ,Peptides - Abstract
Objective Trefoil factor 3 (TFF3, also known as intestinal trefoil factor) is a member of a family of protease-resistant peptides containing a highly conserved motif with 6 cysteine residues. Recent studies have shown that TFF3 is expressed in injured cornea, where it plays a role in corneal wound healing, but not in healthy cornea. Since cartilage and cornea have similar matrix properties, we undertook the present study to investigate whether TFF3 could induce anabolic functions in diseased articular cartilage. Methods We used reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction, Western blot analysis, and immunohistochemistry to measure the expression of TFF3 in healthy articular cartilage, osteoarthritis (OA)–affected articular cartilage, and septic arthritis–affected articular cartilage and to assess the effects of cytokines, bacterial products, and bacterial supernatants on TFF3 production. The effects of TFF3 on matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) production were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and effects on chondrocyte apoptosis were studied by caspase assay and annexin V assay. Results Trefoil factors were not expressed in healthy human articular cartilage, but expression of TFF3 was highly up-regulated in the cartilage of patients with OA. These findings were confirmed in animal models of OA and septic arthritis, as well as in tumor necrosis factor α– and interleukin-1β–treated primary human articular chondrocytes, revealing induction of Tff3/TFF3 under inflammatory conditions. Application of the recombinant TFF3 protein to cultured chondrocytes resulted in increased production of cartilage-degrading MMPs and increased chondrocyte apoptosis. Conclusion In this study using articular cartilage as a model, we demonstrated that TFF3 supports catabolic functions in diseased articular cartilage. These findings widen our knowledge of the functional spectrum of TFF peptides and demonstrate that TFF3 is a multifunctional trefoil factor with the ability to link inflammation with tissue remodeling processes in articular cartilage. Moreover, our data suggest that TFF3 is a factor in the pathogenesis of OA and septic arthritis.
- Published
- 2010
19. The fate of chondrocytes during ageing of human thyroid cartilage
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Saadettin Sel, Jochen A. Werner, Martin Schicht, Friedrich Paulsen, and Horst Claassen
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Adolescent ,Apoptosis ,Oxidative phosphorylation ,Biology ,Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide ,Young Adult ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Chondrocytes ,Sex Factors ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Internal medicine ,Organelle ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Molecular Biology ,Cellular Senescence ,Aged ,NADH Tetrazolium Reductase ,Cartilage ,Thyroid ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Cell Biology ,Middle Aged ,Thyroid cartilage ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Ageing ,Child, Preschool ,Thyroid Cartilage ,Female - Abstract
Human laryngeal cartilages, especially thyroid cartilage, exhibit gender-specific ageing. In contrast to male thyroid cartilages, the ventral half of the female thyroid cartilage plate remains unmineralized until advanced age. In cartilage specimens from laryngectomies and autopsies, apoptosis was studied immunohistochemically and the oxidative mitochondrial enzyme nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide hydride tetrazolium reductase (NADH-TR) was localized histochemically. In addition, very fresh specimens from laryngectomies were fixed under addition of ruthenium hexamine trichloride or tannin to fixation solution to study cell organelles of chondrocytes by electron microscopic methods. In general, apoptotic chondrocytes decreased in thyroid cartilages of both genders, especially after the second decade. In the age group 41-60 years, thyroid cartilage from male specimens revealed a significantly higher percentage of apoptotic cells than did thyroid cartilage from women (P = 0.004), whereas in the age groups 0-20 years and 61-79 years no statistically significant gender difference was determined. In general, thyroid cartilage from women contained more living chondrocytes into advanced age than men. Chondrocytes adjacent to mineralized cartilage were partly positive for apoptosis and NADH-TR and partly negative. Apoptotic chondrocytes often were localized in areas of asbestoid fibres where vascularization and mineralization took place first. Electron microscopy revealed remnants of chondrocytes in asbestoid fibres. Taken together, it can be assumed that some chondrocytes in thyroid cartilage die by apoptosis and that these chondrocytes are characterized by absent reactivity for the mitochondrial enzyme NADH-TR. A possible influence of sexual hormones on apoptotic death of thyroid cartilage cells requires further elucidation.
- Published
- 2009
20. Large patent median arteries and their relation to the superficial palmar arch with respect to history, size consideration and clinic consequences
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Oliver Schmitt, Horst Claassen, and Andreas Wree
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Median artery ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Forearm ,medicine.artery ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Superficial palmar arch ,Carpal tunnel syndrome ,Anterior interosseous nerve syndrome ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,food and beverages ,Arteries ,Anatomy ,Hand ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Orthopedic surgery ,Female ,business ,Artery - Abstract
A large patent median artery can be involved in several clinical disorders like carpal tunnel syndrome, anterior interosseous nerve syndrome and pronator syndrome.The frequency and variability in the expression of the median artery and the expression of the other forearm arteries were recorded during two dissection courses. The topography of the arteries with their ramifications was documented on diagrams and photographs. The outer diameters of forearm arteries were measured.A large median artery was found in 4 of 54 arms (7.4%). The median arteries took their origin from the ulnar artery or the common interosseous artery. In one case, the median artery pierced the median nerve in its course under the pronator teres. The outer diameters of the median arteries varied between 1.5 and 2.0 mm proximally and 1.5 and 2.0 mm distally. The diameters of the radial arteries varied between 3.0 and 5.5 mm proximally and 3.0 and 4.0 mm distally and were not reduced in any of the four cases with a large median artery.Surgeons should be aware of other variations in the forearm when a persistent median artery is identified, for example high median nerve bifurcations. Furthermore, it should be kept in mind that additional structures leading to nerve compression may be present in the carpal tunnel.
- Published
- 2007
21. Influence of Estradiol on Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Expression in Bone: A Study in Göttingen Miniature Pigs and Human Osteoblasts
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Thomas Pufe, Deike Varoga, C. Cellarius, Wolf Petersen, Christoph Jan Wruck, Wolf Drescher, J. Schrezenmeir, Claus-Christian Glüer, A. Franke, Horst Claassen, and Katharina E. Scholz-Ahrens
- Subjects
Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Bone density ,Miniature pig ,Swine ,Angiogenesis ,Keratan sulfate ,Ovariectomy ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Blotting, Western ,Osteoclasts ,Bone and Bones ,Bone remodeling ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Osteoblasts ,Estradiol ,biology ,Chemistry ,Ossification ,Cartilage ,biology.organism_classification ,Vascular endothelial growth factor ,Receptors, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Swine, Miniature ,Female ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
Ovariectomy (OVX) in animal models is an accepted method to simulate postmenopausal osteoprosis. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) has been recently shown to play an important role during endochondral bone formation, hypertrophic cartilage remodeling, ossification, and angiogenesis. We hypothesized that reduced VEGF expression in bone contributes to OVX-induced bone loss and tested it in a miniature pig model and in vitro using human osteoblasts. Seventeen primiparous sows (Göttingen miniature pigs) were allocated to two experimental groups when they were 30 months old: a control group (n = 9) and an OVX group (n = 8). After 15 months, VEGF levels in lumbar vertebrae were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and verified by Western blot analysis. VEGF and its receptor (VEGFR) were localized by immunohistochemistry. Expression of VEGF mRNA was analyzed by real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. Differently sulfated glycosaminoglycans were localized in subchondral bone histochemically. Osteoblasts were immunopositive for VEGF. VEGF concentration in the vertebra was 27% lower in OVX miniature pigs. VEGFR-2 could be immunostained on osteoblasts. VEGF mRNA and protein were detectable in the lumbar vertebrae of all animals. In subchondral trabecular bone of OVX animals, significantly more islands of mineralized cartilage containing chondroitin 4- and 6-sulfate or keratan sulfate occurred compared to the control group. The occurrence of remnants of mineralized cartilage in subchondral bone of the OVX group may be caused by a delayed bone turnover due to low VEGF levels. In vitro experiments revealed an increase of VEGF in the supernatant of osteoblasts after incubation with estradiol. In conclusion, estrogen seems to be a key factor for regulation of VEGF expression in bone. Loss of VEGF due to menopause may be a reason for reduction of bone density.
- Published
- 2007
22. Variations of the A. axillaris and the crural arteries in the same human individual – multiple repetitions of the mammalian plesiomorphic constellation of the arteries
- Author
-
Andreas Wree, Oliver Schmitt, and Horst Claassen
- Subjects
Mammals ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Foot ,Dorsum pedis ,Genetic Variation ,Arteries ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Biology ,Common trunk ,Hand ,Surgery ,Female individual ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cadaver ,medicine ,Animals ,Axillary Artery ,Humans ,Female ,Aged ,Developmental Biology ,Artery - Abstract
While dissecting the body of a 75-year-old female individual we observed "abnormal" patterns of the A. axillaris and the crural arteries which resembled the mammalian plesiomorphic constellation. In the right arm a large common trunk of the A. axillaris gave origin to the A. profunda brachii, the A. circumflexa humeri posterior, the A. circumflexa scapulae and the A. thoracodorsalis. In many other mammals including non-human primates, the Aa. circumflexae humeri and the A. circumflexa scapulae are connected via a third or fourth artery to a common trunk. Since the large common trunk mostly corresponded to the supply area of the A. axillaris, we consider it to be homologous to the distal part of the A. axillaris. In the left arm, except the A. circumflexa humeri posterior and the A. subscapularis which take off together, the other axillary branches showed the "normal" human pattern. In the right leg, the crural arteries exhibited the mammalian plesiomorphic constellation with an A. tibialis anterior ending in the crural extensor muscles, a rudimentary A. tibialis posterior, and a strongly developed A. peronea. In the left leg, the A. tibialis anterior supplied the Dorsum pedis and therefore represented the pattern normally seen in humans. However, in the left leg there also was a rudimentary A. tibialis posterior along with a prominent A. peronea.
- Published
- 2006
23. Isolated flexor muscles of the little toe in the feet of an individual with atrophied or lacking 4th head of the M. extensor digitorum brevis and lacking the 4th tendon of the M. extensor digitorum longus
- Author
-
Horst Claassen and Andreas Wree
- Subjects
Male ,musculoskeletal diseases ,animal structures ,M. extensor digitorum longus ,Toe ,Tendons ,medicine ,Humans ,M. extensor digitorum brevis ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Aged ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Toes ,Flexor muscles ,Phalanx ,musculoskeletal system ,Tendon ,body regions ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Flexor Digitorum Longus ,Autopsy ,Atrophy ,business ,tissues ,Foot (unit) ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
While dissecting the body of a 75-year-old male we observed variations in the Mm. flexor digitorum brevis and longus of both feet. In the left foot, the 4th tendon of the M. flexor digitorum brevis was atrophied and the respective tendon of the M. flexor digitorum longus to the little toe was absent. In the right foot, the 4th tendons of both the Mm. flexor digitorum brevis and longus to the little toe were absent. The lacking deep flexor tendon to the little toe in the left foot was replaced by an isolated flexor muscle originating from the medial and lateral processes of the calcaneal tuberosity, which additionally had connections to the tendinous plate of the M. flexor digitorum longus and the M. quadratus plantae. The absent superficial and deep flexor tendons to the little toe in the right foot were replaced by an isolated flexor muscle arising from the M. quadratus plantae distal from the medial process of the calcaneal tuberosity. The tendon of both isolated flexor muscles inserted in the distal phalanx of the little toe. The left isolated flexor muscle for the little toe had connections to the M. flexor digitorum longus and the M. quadratus plantae. From these results it seems likely that the M. quadratus plantae could be regarded as additional flexor head (caput breve or plantare) of the M. flexor digitorum longus as is described in classic textbooks. In the individual's lifetime the described variation perhaps led to the possibility of an isolated flexion of the little toe.
- Published
- 2003
24. The effect of estrogens and dietary calcium deficiency on the extracellular matrix of articular cartilage in Göttingen miniature pigs
- Author
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Bodo Kurz, Katharina E. Scholz-Ahrens, Michael Schünke, Jürgen Schrezenmeir, Frank Hornberger, and Horst Claassen
- Subjects
Cartilage, Articular ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Swine ,medicine.drug_class ,Keratan sulfate ,Ovariectomy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Osteoarthritis ,Calcium ,Extracellular matrix ,Glycosaminoglycan ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nerve Fibers ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Glycosaminoglycans ,Cartilage ,Estrogens ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Extracellular Matrix ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Estrogen ,Ovariectomized rat ,Swine, Miniature ,Female ,Anatomy ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Clinical observations have suggested that estrogens are involved in the pathogenesis of postmenopausal osteoarthritis (OA). However, positive and negative associations between the incidence of OA and serum estrogen concentrations have been reported. In contrast to this, osteoporosis is regarded as a disease with a strong estrogen-dependent component. Moreover, there is an interaction between estrogen and calcium deficiency: calcium supplementation potentiates the effect of estrogen therapy. The present study was designed to investigate how estrogen deficiency affects the articular cartilage depending on calcium supply. The distribution of different types of glycosaminoglycans and collagens can be used as an indicator for extracellular matrix changes induced by estrogen deficiency. Different levels of dietary calcium were therefore fed to intact and ovariectomized Göttingen miniature pigs for one year before articular cartilage was harvested. The histochemical staining for heavy sulfated glycosaminoglycans in the extracellular matrix of ovariectomized miniature pigs, especially of those fed with a low calcium diet, was stronger in comparison to intact animals. In intact animals type II-collagen was immunodetected in all zones of unmineralized and mineralized articular cartilage, while immunostaining for this protein was negative to weak in the deep radiated fiber zone of ovariectomized minipigs. These results suggest that the synthesis of heavy sulfated glycosaminoglycans and immunohistochemically detectable type II-collagen is possibly influenced by estrogen deficiency. In conclusion, under estrogen deficiency, the extracellular matrix of articular cartilage underwent similar changes to those observed in physiologically aging cartilage where keratan sulfate is increased as a heavy sulfated glycosaminoglycan.
- Published
- 2002
25. Vascularization and cartilage mineralization of the thyroid cartilage of Munich minipigs and domestic pigs
- Author
-
Bernhard Tillmann, Martin Kimpel, Horst Claassen, and Bernd Fleiner
- Subjects
Embryology ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Venule ,Swine ,Chemistry ,Cartilage ,Thyroid ,Connective tissue ,Cell Biology ,Anatomy ,Thyroid cartilage ,Mineralization (biology) ,Extracellular matrix ,Microscopy, Electron ,Calcification, Physiologic ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Thyroid Cartilage ,medicine ,Animals ,Swine, Miniature ,Perichondrium ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Thyroid cartilages of Munich minipigs and domestic pigs were investigated by polychrome sequential labeling, radiography, intravascular injections, histologic examination and scanning electron microscopy in order to gain further insight into the process of vascularization and cartilage mineralization. The relationship between vascularization and cartilage mineralization has only been studied in chondroepiphyses of long bones. Vessels branch off the perichondrial vascular network and enter parts of the thyroid cartilage with a large transverse diameter. Cartilage canals, which are perichondral invaginations, contain an arteriole, a venule, a capillary network and connective tissue. The capillaries form a glomerulus-like structure deep in the matrix of the cartilage. Neighbouring cartilage canals do not display any anastomoses. Cartilage mineralization occurs in large areas of the thyroid cartilage. It is only found in the interterritorial extracellular matrix. Mineralization of the cartilage is evident in areas supplied with cartilage canals as well as in non-supplied areas. Mineralized interterritorial matrix is composed of circular structures of different sizes fusing to form plaques. In scanning electron microscopy circular structures appear as globules. It is possible to visualize the dynamic process of cartilage mineralization with polychrome sequential labeling; it proceeds up to 4 microm per week. Distribution of cartilage canals reveals their nutritional role for the cartilage. According to investigations in chondroepiphyses, cartilage mineralization starts adjacent to the glomerular end of cartilage canals. In contrast, no correlation between cartilage vascularization and the beginning of cartilage mineralization of the thyroid cartilage of Munich minipigs and of domestic pigs has been found.
- Published
- 1999
26. Special pattern of endochondral ossification in human laryngeal cartilages: X-ray and light-microscopic studies on thyroid cartilage
- Author
-
Horst, Claassen, Martin, Schicht, Saadettin, Sel, and Friedrich, Paulsen
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Adolescent ,Swine ,Ossification, Heterotopic ,Infant ,Middle Aged ,Radiography ,Young Adult ,Fetus ,Osteogenesis ,Child, Preschool ,Thyroid Cartilage ,Animals ,Humans ,Swine, Miniature ,Female ,Child ,Aged - Abstract
Endochondral ossification is a process that also occurs in the skeleton of the larynx. Differences in the ossification mechanism in comparison to growth plates are not understood until now. To get deeper insights into this process, human thyroid cartilage was investigated by the use of X-rays and a series of light-microscopic stainings. A statistical analysis of mineralization was done by scanning areas of mineralized cartilage and of ossification. We detected a special mode of endochondral ossification which differs from the processes in growth plates. Thyroid cartilage ossifies very slowly and in a gender-specific manner. Compared with age-matched women, bone formation in thyroid cartilage of men is significantly higher in the age group 41-60 years. Endochondral ossification is prepared by internal changes of extracellular matrix leading to areas of asbestoid fibers with ingrowing cartilage canals. In contrast to growth plates, bone is deposited on large areas of mineralized cartilage, which appear at the rims of cartilage canals. Furthermore, primary parallel fibered bone was observed which was deposited on woven bone. The predominant bone type is cancellous bone with trabeculae, whereas compact bone with Haversian systems was seldom found. Trabeculae contain a great number of reversal and arresting lines meaning that the former were often reconstructed and that bone formation was arrested and resumed again with advancing age. It is hypothesized that throughout life trabeculae of ossified thyroid cartilage undergo adaptation to different loads due to the use of voice.
- Published
- 2013
27. Localization of collagens and alkaline phosphatase activity during mineralization and ossification of human first rib cartilage
- Author
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Willm Uwe Kampen, Horst Claassen, and Thorsten Kirsch
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Adolescent ,Ribs ,Osteogenesis ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Molecular Biology ,Endochondral ossification ,Hyaline cartilage ,Chemistry ,Ossification ,Cartilage ,Infant ,Cell Biology ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,Alkaline Phosphatase ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Collagen, type I, alpha 1 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Fibrocartilage ,Alkaline phosphatase ,Female ,Collagen ,medicine.symptom ,Type I collagen - Abstract
The localization of type X collagen and alkaline phosphatase activity was examined in order to gain a better understanding of tissue remodelling during development of human first rib cartilage. First rib cartilages from children and adolescents showed no staining for type X collagen and alkaline phosphatase activity. After onset of mineralization in the late second decade, a peripheral ossification process preceded by mineralized fibrocartilage could be distinguished from a more central one preceded by mineralized hyaline cartilage. No immunostaining for type X collagen was found in either type of cartilage. However, strong staining for alkaline phosphatase activity was detected around chondrocyte-like cells within fibrocartilage adjacent to the peripheral mineralization front, while a weaker staining pattern was observed around chondrocytes of hyaline cartilage near the central mineralization front. In addition, the territorial matrix of some chondrocytes within the hyaline cartilage revealed staining for type I collagen, suggesting that these cells undergo a dedifferentiation process, which leads to a switch from type II to type I collagen synthesis. The study provides evidence that mineralization of the hyaline cartilage areas in human first rib cartilage occurs in the absence of type X collagen synthesis but in the presence of alkaline phosphatase. Thus, mineralization of first rib cartilage seems to follow a different pattern from endochondral ossification in epiphyseal discs.
- Published
- 1996
28. Localization of type I and II collagen during development of human first rib cartilage
- Author
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Horst Claassen, Willm Uwe Kampen, and Thorsten Kirsch
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Aging ,Embryology ,Adolescent ,Type II collagen ,Ribs ,Osteogenesis ,medicine ,Humans ,Perichondrium ,Growth Plate ,Child ,Endochondral ossification ,Aged ,Chemistry ,Hyaline cartilage ,Cartilage ,Infant ,Cell Biology ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,musculoskeletal system ,Immunohistochemistry ,Collagen, type I, alpha 1 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Fibrocartilage ,Female ,Collagen ,Type I collagen ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The localization of fibrillar type I and II collagen was investigated by immunofluorescence staining with specific antibodies in order to obtain a better understanding of tissue remodelling during the development of first rib cartilage. In childhood and early adolescence type I collagen was found to be restricted to the perichondrium of first rib cartilage, while type II collagen was localized in the matrix of hyaline cartilage. However, in advanced age type I collagen was also found in the territorial matrix of intermediate and central chondrocytes of first rib cartilage. The matrix of subperichondrial chondrocytes was negative for type I collagen. This suggests that some chondrocytes in first rib cartilage undergo a modulation to type I collagen-producing cells. The first bone formation was observed in rib cartilages of 20- to 25-year-old adults. Interestingly, the ossification began peripherally, adjacent to the innermost layer of the perichondrium where areas of fibrocartilage had developed. The newly formed bone matrix showed strong immunostaining for type I collagen. Fibrocartilage bordering peripherally on bone matrix revealed only a faint staining for type I collagen, but strong immunoreactivity to type II collagen. The interterritorial matrix of the central chondrocytes failed to react with the type II collagen antibody, in both men and women, from the end of the second decade. These observations indicate that major matrix changes occur at the same time in male and female first rib cartilages. Thus, our findings indicate that ossification in human first rib cartilage does not follow the same pattern as that observed in endochondral ossification of epiphyseal discs or sternal cartilage.
- Published
- 1995
29. Impact of sex hormones, insulin, growth factors and peptides on cartilage health and disease
- Author
-
Friedrich Paulsen, Horst Claassen, and Martin Schicht
- Subjects
Cartilage, Articular ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,medicine.drug_class ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Physiology ,Endocrine System ,Osteoarthritis ,Disease ,Biology ,Diabetes Complications ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Animals ,Humans ,Insulin ,Gonadal Steroid Hormones ,Cartilage ,Cell Biology ,Sex hormone receptor ,medicine.disease ,Disease Models, Animal ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Estrogen ,Cytokines ,Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Female ,Metabolic Networks and Pathways ,Hormone - Abstract
Sex hormones contribute to the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis (OA) in both sexes. OA is normally not seen in pre-menopausal women, whereas men may develop the disease as early as the 30th year of life. OA also shows increased incidence in association with diseases such as diabetes mellitus. Recent years have seen characterization of essential components of a functional endocrinal network in the articular cartilage comprising not only sex hormones but apparently insulin, growth factors and various peptides as well. In this review, we summarize the latest information regarding the influence of sex hormones, insulin, growth factors and some peptides on healthy cartilage and their involvement in osteoarthritis. Both animal and human research data were considered. The results are presented in an information matrix that identifies what is known, with supporting references, and identifies areas for further investigation.
- Published
- 2010
30. The phytoestrogens daidzein and genistein enhance the insulin-stimulated sulfate uptake in articular chondrocytes
- Author
-
Volker Briese, Horst Claassen, Barbara Nebe, Michael Schünke, Farkhat Manapov, and Bodo Kurz
- Subjects
Cartilage, Articular ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Genistein ,Phytoestrogens ,Osteoarthritis ,Sulfuric Acid Esters ,Culture Media, Serum-Free ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Glycosaminoglycan ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Sulfation ,Chondrocytes ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Insulin ,Cells, Cultured ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Daidzein ,food and beverages ,Cell Biology ,Metabolism ,medicine.disease ,Isoflavones ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Cattle ,Female - Abstract
Clinical observations have suggested a relationship between osteoarthritis and a changed estrogen metabolism in menopausal women. Phytoestrogens have been shown to ameliorate various menopausal symptoms. Proteoglycans (PG) consisting of low and high sulfated glycosaminoglycans (GAG) are the main components of articular cartilage matrix, and their synthesis is increased by insulin in growth plate cartilage. We have investigated whether GAG synthesis and sodium [35S]sulfate incorporation in female bovine articular chondrocytes are affected by daidzein, genistein, and/or insulin. For comparative purposes, estradiol incubations were performed. Articular chondrocytes were cultured in monolayers at 5% O2 and 5% CO2 in medium containing serum for 7 days followed by the addition of 10(-11) M-10(-4) M daidzein, genistein, 17beta-estradiol, or 5 microg/ml insulin in a serum-free culture phase of 2 days. Photometrically analyzed GAG synthesis was significantly suppressed by high doses (10(-5) M-10(-4) M) of daidzein, genistein, and 17beta-estradiol. Although insulin raised the sodium [35S]sulfate uptake significantly, different concentrations of daidzein, genistein, or 17beta-estradiol showed no significant effects. However, the stimulating effect of insulin on sulfate incorporation was enhanced significantly after preincubation of cells with 10(-11) M-10(-5) M daidzein or 10(-9) M-10(-5) M genistein but not by 17beta-estradiol. In view of the risks of long-term estrogen replacement therapy, further experiments should clarify the potential benefit of phytoestrogens and insulin in articular cartilage metabolism.
- Published
- 2007
31. Androgen receptors and gender-specific distribution of alkaline phosphatase in human thyroid cartilage
- Author
-
Saadettin Sel, Friedrich Paulsen, Heiner Mönig, Jochen A. Werner, and Horst Claassen
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Adolescent ,Androgen Receptor Positive ,Estrogen receptor ,Biology ,Sex Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Testosterone ,Receptor ,Child ,Molecular Biology ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cartilage ,Estrogen Receptor alpha ,Cell Biology ,Middle Aged ,Alkaline Phosphatase ,Androgen receptor ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Hormone receptor ,Receptors, Androgen ,Thyroid Cartilage ,Alkaline phosphatase ,Female ,Receptors, Progesterone ,Hormone - Abstract
The degree of mineralization in human thyroid cartilage is gender specific. Until now, laryngeal tissue was tested for sexual hormone receptors by the use of radiolabelled hormones only without exact localization of the receptors. In this study immediately frozen cartilage specimens from seven male and one female patient who underwent laryngectomy were used for immunolocalization of sexual hormone receptors. Additionally, serum sexual hormone levels were measured by means of radioimmunoassay. Alkaline phosphatase was localized enzymohistochemically in another cohort of six male and four female cartilage specimens from laryngectomies and autopsies. Chondrocytes in thyroid cartilage from both sexes reacted with antibodies to the androgen receptor. The low serum testosterone levels, which varied between 1.5 and 3.9 ng/ml, did not correlate with insufficient mineralization of thyroid cartilage in men (r=0.363, P=0.432). Chondrocytes did not react with antibodies to the estrogen receptor alpha and the progesterone receptor in both sexes. Expression of alkaline phosphatase started about the middle of the second decade. Some chondrocytes near the mineralization front were positive for androgen receptor and alkaline phosphatase, other chondrocytes were negative for both. Our results suggest the involvement of androgen receptor positive chondrocytes in thyroid cartilage mineralization, probably by a testosterone-linked stimulation of alkaline phosphatase.
- Published
- 2006
32. Influence of 17beta-estradiol and insulin on type II collagen and protein synthesis of articular chondrocytes
- Author
-
Horst Claassen, Michael Schünke, Bodo Kurz, and Matthias Schlüter
- Subjects
Cartilage, Articular ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Time Factors ,Physiology ,medicine.drug_class ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Type II collagen ,Cell Culture Techniques ,Osteoarthritis ,Culture Media, Serum-Free ,Chondrocytes ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Insulin ,Collagen Type II ,Cells, Cultured ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Estradiol ,Chemistry ,Cartilage ,medicine.disease ,Collagen, type I, alpha 1 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Cell culture ,Estrogen ,Cattle ,Female ,Type I collagen - Abstract
Clinical observations have suggested a relationship between osteoarthritis and a changed estrogen metabolism in menopausal women. Type II collagen is one main structural protein of articular cartilage matrix and its synthesis is increased by insulin in growth plate cartilage. Therefore, it was investigated if [(3)H]-proline incorporation and type II collagen synthesis (immunocytochemistry, ELISA) in female bovine articular chondrocytes are affected by 17beta-estradiol and/or insulin. Articular chondrocytes were cultured in monolayers at 5% O(2) in medium containing serum for 5-9 days, followed by application of 10(-13) to 10(-9) M estradiol or 5 microg/ml insulin during a serum-free culture phase of 2-3 days. Immunostaining for type II collagen was strong in the serum-free culture phase whereas it was negative for type I collagen, indicating that cells did not dedifferentiate to fibroblast-like cells during culture in serum-free medium. Whereas insulin raised the proline incorporation and the type II collagen synthesis significantly, physiological doses of estradiol did not show significant effects. The stimulating effect of insulin on the [(3)H]-proline incorporation or the type II collagen synthesis was significantly suppressed after preincubation of cells with 10(-11) to 10(-9) M estradiol resembling an unfavorable effect for articular cartilage. The suppression was reversed if cells were incubated with 10(-11) to 10(-7) M tamoxifen or ICI 182,780 combined with 10(-11) or 10(-9) M estradiol followed by incubation with 5 microg/ml insulin, indicating an estrogen receptor-mediated process. Because the articular cartilage of diabetic patients is biomechanically less stable, further experiments are needed to clarify the role of estradiol and insulin in the metabolism of articular chondrocytes.
- Published
- 2005
33. Extracellular matrix changes in knee joint cartilage following bone-active drug treatment
- Author
-
Jürgen Schrezenmeir, Claus-Christian Glüer, Christian Cellarius, Michael Schünke, Katharina E. Scholz-Ahrens, Horst Claassen, and Bodo Kurz
- Subjects
Cartilage, Articular ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Swine ,Ovariectomy ,Prednisolone ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Calcium ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Glycosaminoglycan ,Extracellular matrix ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Chondrocytes ,Internal medicine ,Sodium fluoride ,medicine ,Animals ,Ibandronic Acid ,Glycosaminoglycans ,Bone Density Conservation Agents ,Diphosphonates ,Cartilage ,Estrogens ,Cell Biology ,Alkaline Phosphatase ,Vitamin D Deficiency ,Extracellular Matrix ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Ovariectomized rat ,Alkaline phosphatase ,Sodium Fluoride ,Swine, Miniature ,Female ,Glucocorticoid ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Certain drugs or treatments that are known to affect bone quality or integrity might have side effects on the extracellular matrix of articular cartilage. We investigated the effects of vitamin D and calcium deficiency, estrogen deficiency, and hypercortisolism alone or in combination with bisphosphonates or sodium fluoride in an animal model, viz., the Gottingen miniature pig (n=29). The articular cartilage from knee joints was analyzed for its content of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs, as macromolecules responsible for the elasticity of articular cartilage) by a spectrometric method with dimethylene blue chloride. In cryo- or paraffin sections, alkaline phosphatase (AP, as an enzyme indicating mineralization or reorganization of articular cartilage matrix) was localized by enzyme histochemistry, and positive cells were counted, whereas differently sulfated GAGs were stained histochemically. A significant decrease in GAG content was measured in ovariectomized and long-term glucocorticoid-treated animals compared with untreated animals. In the glucocorticoid/sodium fluoride group, GAGs were significantly diminished, and significantly fewer AP-positive chondrocytes were counted compared with the control. GAG content was slightly higher, and significantly more AP-positive chondrocytes were counted in short-term glucocorticoid-treated animals then in the control group. GAGs, as part of proteoglycans, are responsible for the water-storage capacity that gives articular cartilage its unique property of elasticity. Thus, ovariectomy and long-term glucocorticoid therapy, especially when combined with sodium fluoride, have detrimental effects on this tissue.
- Published
- 2005
34. The Etruscan skulls of the Rostock anatomical collection--how do they compare with the skeletal findings of the first thousand years B. C.?
- Author
-
Horst Claassen and Andreas Wree
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Geography ,Fossils ,Skull ,Paleontology ,General Medicine ,Comparative anatomy ,Bregma ,Middle Aged ,Archaeology ,Bone and Bones ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Bronze Age ,Germany ,medicine ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,Anatomy ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Summary Seven Etruscan skulls were found in Corneto Tarquinia in the years 1881 and 1882 and were given as present to Rostock's anatomical collection in 1882. The origin of the Etruscans who were contemporary with the Celts is not yet clear; according to Herodotus they had emigrated from Lydia in Asia Minor to Italy. To fit the Etruscan skulls into an ethnological grid they were compared with skeletal remains of the first thousand years B.C.E. All skulls were found to be male; their age ranged from 20 to 60 years, with an average age of about thirty. A comparison of the median sagittal outlines of the Etruscan skulls and the contemporary Hallstatt-Celtic skulls from North Bavaria showed that the former were shorter and lower. Maximum skull length, minimum frontal breadth, ear bregma height, bizygomatical breadth and orbital breadth of the Etruscan skulls were statistically significantly less developed compared to Hallstatt-Celtics from North Bavaria. In comparison to other contemporary skeletal remains the Etruscan skulls had no similarities in common with Hallstatt-Celtic skulls from North Bavaria and Baden-Wurttemberg but rather with Hallstatt-Celtic skulls from Hallstatt in Austria. Compared to chronologically adjacent skeletal remains the Etruscan skulls did not show similarities with Early Bronze Age skulls from Moravia but with Latene-Celtic skulls from Manching in South Bavaria. Due to the similarities of the Etruscan skulls with some Celtic skulls from South Bavaria and Austria, it seems more likely that the Etruscans were original inhabitants of Etruria than immigrants.
- Published
- 2004
35. Estradiol protects cultured articular chondrocytes from oxygen-radical-induced damage
- Author
-
Horst Claassen, Michael Schünke, and Bodo Kurz
- Subjects
Cartilage, Articular ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine.disease_cause ,Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances ,Antioxidants ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Lipid peroxidation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Chondrocytes ,Internal medicine ,Lactate dehydrogenase ,Osteoarthritis ,medicine ,Membrane fluidity ,TBARS ,Animals ,Vitamin E ,Cells, Cultured ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Reactive oxygen species ,Vitamin C ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Estradiol ,L-Lactate Dehydrogenase ,Cell Biology ,Drug Combinations ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Culture Media, Conditioned ,Cattle ,Female ,Menopause ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Oxidative stress - Abstract
Osteoarthritis (OA) is aggravated in menopausal women possibly because of changed serum estrogen levels. Estradiol has been postulated to affect oxidative stress induced by reactive oxygen species (ROS) in articular chondrocytes. We generated ROS in cultured bovine articular chondrocytes by incubating them with combined Fe2SO4, vitamin C, and hydrogen peroxide. The release of thiobarbituric-acid-reactive substances (TBARS, lipid peroxidation) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH, membrane damage) was measured photometrically. Various estradiol doses and vitamin E, serving as control with an established anti-oxidative capacity, were applied either upon each exchange of medium and during radical production (strategy 1) or only during radical production (strategy 2). In chondrocytes incubated according to strategy 1, the production of TBARS and LDH release were significantly suppressed by 10(-10)-10(-4) M estradiol or by vitamin E. Under strategy 2, the production of TBARS was significantly suppressed at estradiol concentrations higher than 10(-6) M, whereas LDH release was inhibited at concentrations of 10(-6)-10(-4) M. Vitamin E showed no significant effects. As repeated application of estradiol and vitamin E produced the best results, estradiol, like vitamin E, was speculated to accumulate in the plasma membrane and to decrease membrane fluidity resulting in protection against lipid peroxidation (non-genomic effect). Thus, in contrast to the neuroprotective effect of 17beta-estradiol in supraphysiological doses reported recently, the anti-oxidative potential of estradiol appears to protect articular chondrocytes from ROS-induced damage when the hormone is given repeatedly in a physiological range. Decreased estradiol levels may therefore contribute to menopausal OA in the long term.
- Published
- 2004
36. Multiple variations in the region of Mm. extensores carpi radialis longus and brevis
- Author
-
Andreas Wree and Horst Claassen
- Subjects
Abductor Pollicis Longus ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,musculoskeletal system ,Tendon ,body regions ,Retinaculum ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Forearm ,Extensor Carpi Radialis Brevis ,medicine ,MULTIPLE VARIATIONS ,First metacarpal bone ,medicine.bone ,Humans ,Female ,Extensor Carpi Radialis Longus ,business ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Developmental Biology ,Aged - Abstract
While dissecting the body of an 80-year-old female we observed multiple variations in the right region of Mm. extensores carpi radialis longus and brevis. The M. extensor carpi radialis longus gave origin to an accessory head. The tendon of this accessory head passed through a separate tunnel in the extensor retinaculum and inserted in the middle of the first metacarpal bone. Concerning its function, this accessory head of the M. extensor carpi radialis longus could be regarded as an additional abductor pollicis. The M. extensor carpi radialis brevis had an accessory tendon lying underneath the main tendon of this muscle. The accessory tendon joined with the main tendon just when undercrossing Mm. abductor pollicis longus and extensor pollicis brevis. Afterwards the tendon lay in the second tunnel of the extensor retinaculum and inserted in the base of the third metacarpal. In her lifetime the individual's tabatiere probably must have been conspicuously pronounced at its radial margin.
- Published
- 2002
37. Articular cartilage chondrocytes express aromatase and use enzymes involved in estrogen metabolism
- Author
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Horst Claassen, Saskia S. Guddat, Lars Fester, Andrea Nielitz, Karl-Stefan Delank, Judith Bechmann, David Wohlrab, Lars Bräuer, Martin Schicht, Jana Ernst, Michael Tsokos, and Friedrich Paulsen
- Subjects
Adult ,Cartilage, Articular ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Blotting, Western ,Immunology ,Estrogen receptor ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Estrone ,Osteoarthritis ,Biology ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Cell Line ,Young Adult ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Aromatase ,Chondrocytes ,Rheumatology ,Medizinische Fakultät ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,ddc:610 ,Testosterone ,Aged ,Aromatase inhibitor ,Cartilage ,Letrozole ,Estrogens ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Female ,Research Article ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Introduction: Sex hormones, especially estrogens, have been implicated in articular cartilage metabolism and the pathogenesis of postmenopausal osteoarthritis. The conversion by aromatase (CYP19A1) of androstenedione into estrone (E1) and of testosterone into 17β-estradiol (E2) plays a key role in the endogenous synthesis of estrogens in tissue. Methods: We analyzed the expression of aromatase (CYP19A1) in immortalized C-28/I2 and T/C-28a2 chondrocytes, as well as in cultured primary human articular chondrocytes and human articular cartilage tissue, by means of RT-PCR, Western blotting and immunohistochemistry. By means of quantitative RT-PCR and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, we also determined whether the aromatase inhibitor letrozole influences estrogen metabolism of cultured chondrocytes in immortalized C-28/I2 chondrocytes. Results: Aromatase mRNA was detected in both immortalized chondrocyte cell lines, in cultured primary human chondrocytes, and in human articular cartilage tissue. By means of Western blot analysis, aromatase was detected at the protein level in articular cartilage taken from various patients of both sexes and different ages. Cultured primary human articular chondrocytes, C-28/I2 and T/C-28a2, and human articular cartilage tissue reacted with antibodies for aromatase. Incubation of C-28/I2 chondrocytes with 10 �11 Mt o 10 �7 M letrozole as an aromatase inhibitor revealed significantly increased amounts of the mRNAs of the enzyme cytochrome P4501A1 (CYP1A1), which is involved in the catagen estrogen metabolism, and of the estrogen receptors ER-α and ER-β. Concomitantly, synthesis of estrone (E1) was significantly downregulated after incubation with letrozole. Conclusions: We demonstrate that human articular cartilage expresses aromatase at the mRNA and protein levels. Blocking of estrone synthesis by the aromatase inhibitor letrozole is counteracted by an increase in ER-α and ER-β .I n addition, CYP1A1, an enzyme involved in catabolic estrogen metabolism, is upregulated. This suggests that articular chondrocytes use ERs functionally. The role of endogenous synthesized estrogens in articular cartilage health remains to be elucidated.
- Published
- 2014
38. Immunohistochemical detection of estrogen receptor alpha in articular chondrocytes from cows, pigs and humans: in situ and in vitro results
- Author
-
Joachim Hassenpflug, Horst Claassen, Hubert Thole, Bodo Kurz, Walter Sierralta, and Michael Schünke
- Subjects
Cartilage, Articular ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Swine ,Estrogen receptor ,Alpha (ethology) ,Osteoarthritis ,Biology ,Chondrocytes ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Receptor ,Cells, Cultured ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cartilage ,Estrogen Receptor alpha ,Infant ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Cell Hypoxia ,Oxygen tension ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Receptors, Estrogen ,Cattle ,Female ,Anatomy ,Estrogen receptor alpha ,Developmental Biology ,Hormone - Abstract
Clinical observations suggest that estrogens are involved in the pathogenesis of postmenopausal osteoarthritis, but only little is known about the influence of these hormones on articular cartilage cells. The effect of estradiol is mediated by estrogen receptors alpha and beta. The goal of the present study was to search for estrogen receptor alpha in articular tissue from cows, pigs and humans by immunohistochemistry to form a basis for in vitro studies. In addition, we also tried to detect estrogen receptor alpha in cultivated articular chondrocytes from cows and bulls under certain culture conditions. Estrogen receptor alpha is detected by the use of antibody 13H2 in articular chondrocytes from cows, bulls, pigs and humans. Chondrocytes are physiologically exposed to reduced oxygen tension. In isolated articular chondrocytes from cows and bulls incubated either with 21% O2 or with 5% O2 positive cells were also found. These positive results therefore encourage testing the influence of estradiol on cultivated articular cartilage cells in these species under different culture conditions.
- Published
- 2001
39. Evaluation of water content by spatially resolved transverse relaxation times of human articular cartilage
- Author
-
S Lüssea, Martin Heller, Michael Schünke, Claus-Christian Glüer, Joachim Hassenpflug, Horst Claassen, and T Gehrke
- Subjects
Adult ,Cartilage, Articular ,Materials science ,Knee Joint ,Cartilage ,Relaxation (NMR) ,Biomedical Engineering ,Biophysics ,Delayed Gadolinium Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Cartilage ,Articular cartilage ,In Vitro Techniques ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Spin–spin relaxation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Body Water ,Transverse relaxation ,In vivo ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Water content ,Aged - Abstract
Non-invasive assessment of cartilage properties, specifically water content, could prove helpful in the diagnosis of early degenerative joint diseases. Transverse relaxation times T2 of human articular cartilage (34 cartilage slices of three donors) were measured on a pixel-by-pixel basis in a clinical whole body MR system in vitro. In vivo feasibility to measure quantitative T2 maps was shown for human patellar cartilage. The relaxation times of cartilage with collagen in the radial zone oriented perpendicular to the magnetic field increased from approximately 10 ms near the bone to approximately 60 ms near the articular surface. Cartilage water content of the tibial plateau and femoral condyles could be determined from the correlation with T2 (R2 = 0.71) with an error of approximately 2 wt.%. In vivo, directional variation would need to be considered. If confirmed in vivo, T2 measurements could potentially serve as a non-invasive tool for the evaluation of the status and distribution of water content in articular cartilage.
- Published
- 2000
40. Matrix vesicles mediate mineralization of human thyroid cartilage
- Author
-
Horst Claassen and T. Kirsch
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Annexins ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Immunoblotting ,Cytoplasmic Granules ,Mineralization (biology) ,Phosphates ,Extracellular matrix ,Endocrinology ,Calcification, Physiologic ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Ossification ,Chemistry ,Vesicle ,Cartilage ,Middle Aged ,Thyroid cartilage ,Cell biology ,Microscopy, Electron ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biochemistry ,Thyroid Cartilage ,Ultrastructure ,Alkaline phosphatase ,Calcium ,Female ,Collagen ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
Mineralization and ossification of human thyroid cartilage first starts after the end of adolescence when the previously cartilaginous human skeleton has become ossified and the epiphyseal discs are in the process of closing. However, the mechanisms involved in mineralization and ossification of human thyroid cartilage are not well understood. Ultrastructural analysis of human thyroid cartilage revealed that mineralization started close to cartilage canals in a matrix containing gigantic collagen fibers (asbestoid fibers). Matrix vesicles were detected in mineralized areas and were often associated with needle-like crystals. For the first time we were able to isolate matrix vesicles from human thyroid cartilage by mild enzymatic digestions and ultracentrifugation. These particles were oval and varied in size; some were heavily calcified. They were enriched in alkaline phosphatase, calcium, and inorganic phosphate, suggesting that the particles contain Ca2+-Pi complexes. Immunoblot analysis of these vesicles revealed the presence of annexins II, V, and VI, membrane-associated, channel-forming proteins, which allow influx of Ca2+ into the vesicles and intralumenal crystal growth. In addition, the vesicles were associated with types II and X collagen, suggesting that this association not only anchors the vesicles to the extracellular matrix, but, as shown previously, also stimulates Ca2+ influx into these particles. In conclusion, matrix vesicles isolated from human thyroid cartilage contain all the components, enabling them to initiate and mediate the mineralization process in human thyroid cartilage.
- Published
- 2000
41. [Untitled]
- Author
-
Horst Claassen
- Subjects
symbols.namesake ,Anthropology ,Philosophy ,symbols ,Strouhal number ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Developmental Biology - Published
- 2008
42. [Untitled]
- Author
-
Horst Claassen
- Subjects
Philosophy ,Stuttgart ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Humanities ,Developmental Biology - Published
- 2005
43. Cartilage canals in human thyroid cartilage characterized by immunolocalization of collagen types I, II, pro-III, IV and X
- Author
-
Horst Claassen, Guido Simons, and Thorsten Kirsch
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Embryology ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Extracellular matrix ,Type IV collagen ,Calcification, Physiologic ,Fetus ,Sex Factors ,medicine ,Perichondrium ,Humans ,Child ,Aged ,Chemistry ,Ossification ,Cartilage ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Infant ,Cell Biology ,Anatomy ,Chondrogenesis ,Thyroid cartilage ,Immunohistochemistry ,Extracellular Matrix ,Collagen, type I, alpha 1 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Child, Preschool ,Thyroid Cartilage ,Female ,Autopsy ,Collagen ,medicine.symptom ,Procollagen ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
In this study the collagenous composition of cartilage canals in human thyroid cartilage, which are perichondral invaginations of blood vessels and connective tissue, and the surrounding cartilage matrix were investigated by immunolabelling with specific antibodies against type I, II, pro-III, IV and X collagen. During childhood and early adolescence no cartilage canals were detected in thyroid cartilage, and immunolabelling for type IV collagen was restricted to basal lamina components of blood vessels in the perichondrium. First immunolabelling for type IV collagen, belonging to blood vessels in cartilage canals, in both sexes was detected about the end of the second decade; it was localized in the dorsal part of the thyroid cartilage plate. At this time thyroid cartilage has already reached its final form and size. As revealed by von Kossa staining, vascularization preceded mineralization and ossification. In contrast to the male thyroid cartilage plate, no immunostaining for type IV collagen and no ossification was detected in the ventral half of female thyroid cartilage even in advanced age. The extracellular matrix of cells in cartilage canals showed positive immunostaining for collagen types I and pro-III as well as for collagen type II, indicating that the cells in the canal possess fibroblastic and chondrogenic properties. The extracellular matrix of hypertrophic chondrocytes adjacent to cartilage canals showed strong immunoreactivity for type X collagen. First mineralization was detected close to cartilage canals, suggesting that mineralization in human thyroid cartilage starts in the extracellular matrix adjacent to cartilage canals.
- Published
- 1996
44. Areas of asbestoid (amianthoid) fibers in human thyroid cartilage characterized by immunolocalization of collagen types I, II, IX, XI and X
- Author
-
Horst Claassen and Thorsten Kirsch
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Adolescent ,Thyroid Gland ,Gestational Age ,Matrix (biology) ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Glycosaminoglycan ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Aged ,Territorial matrix ,Chemistry ,Cartilage ,Infant ,Cell Biology ,Middle Aged ,Molecular biology ,Staining ,Collagen, type I, alpha 1 ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Collagen ,Type I collagen ,Immunostaining - Abstract
The distribution of type I, II, IX, XI and X collagens in and close to areas of asbestoid (amianthoid) fibers in thyroid cartilages of various ages was investigated in this study. Asbestoid fibers were first detected in thyroid cartilage from a 3-year-old male child. Areas of asbestoid fibers functionally appear to serve as guide rails for vascularization of thyroid cartilage. Alcian blue staining in the presence of 0.3 M MgCl2 revealed a loss of glycosaminoglycans in areas of asbestoid fibers. In addition, the fibers reacted positively with antibodies against collagen types II, IX and XI, but showed no staining with antibodies to collagen types I and X. Territorial matrix of adjacent chondrocytes showed the same staining pattern. In addition to staining for type II, IX and XI collagens, asbestoid fibers showed strong immunostaining for type I collagen after puberty but not for type X collagen. However, groups of chondrocytes within areas of asbestoid fibers reacted strongly with antibodies to type X collagen, suggesting that this collagen plays an important role in matrix of highly differentiated chondrocytes. The finding that these type X collagen-positive chondrocytes also revealed immunostaining for type I collagen confirms previous studies showing that hypertrophic chondrocytes can further differentiate into cells that are characterized by the synthesis of type X and I collagens.
- Published
- 1995
45. Temporal and spatial localization of type I and II collagens in human thyroid cartilage
- Author
-
Thorsten Kirsch and Horst Claassen
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Embryology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Aging ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Type II collagen ,Fetus ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Perichondrium ,Humans ,Tissue Distribution ,Child ,Endochondral ossification ,Aged ,Staining and Labeling ,Ossification ,Hyaline cartilage ,Chemistry ,Cartilage ,Infant ,Cell Biology ,Middle Aged ,Chondrogenesis ,Immunohistochemistry ,Collagen, type I, alpha 1 ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Child, Preschool ,Thyroid Cartilage ,Female ,Collagen ,Anatomy ,medicine.symptom ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Thyroid cartilages of various ages were investigated by immunofluorescence staining for localization of the fibrillar collagen types I and II in order to understand the tissue remodeling occurring during the mineralization and ossification of thyroid cartilage. In fetal and juvenile thyroid cartilages, type I collagen was restricted to the inner and outer perichondrium, while type II collagen was localized in the matrix of hyaline cartilage. However, in advanced ages, type I collagen was also localized in the pericellular and in the interterritorial matrix of intermediate and central chondrocytes of thyroid cartilage. The matrix of peripheral chondrocytes was negative for type I collagen. This suggests that some chondrocytes in thyroid cartilage undergo a differentiation to type I collagen-producing chondrocytes. At the beginning of ossification, bone-related type I collagen was chiefly detected in the central cartilage layer, but was never deposited first from the perichondrium in the direction to the subperichondrial cartilage. This observation confirmed previous findings showing that osteogenesis mainly follows an endochondral ossification pattern. Interterritorial matrix failed to react with the type II collagen antibody in men from the beginning of the third decade, and later still in women, even after treatment with hyaluronidase. These observations indicate that major matrix changes occur faster in male than in female thyroid cartilage.
- Published
- 1994
46. Fiber differentiation of the human laryngeal muscles using the inhibition reactivation myofibrillar ATPase technique
- Author
-
Jochen A. Werner and Horst Claassen
- Subjects
Cricoarytenoid Muscle ,Adenosine Triphosphatases ,Adult ,Male ,Embryology ,biology ,Myosin ATPase ,Chemistry ,Histocytochemistry ,ATPase ,Cell Biology ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,Arytenoid muscle ,Posterior cricoarytenoid muscle ,Laryngeal Muscle ,biology.protein ,Humans ,Thyroarytenoid muscle ,Female ,Laryngeal Muscles ,Myofibril ,Developmental Biology ,Aged - Abstract
The aim of the present study was to further subdivide the type II fibers of the human thyroarytenoid and posterior cricoarytenoid muscles by means of a modified myosin ATPase reaction. In order to understand the functioning of these highly strained muscles better, it is important to know the respective percentage of fatigue-resistant type IIA fibers and fatigable type IIB fibers. The material comprised the larynges of seven laryngectomized males aged between 45 and 70 years and four laryngectomized females aged between 39 and 72 years. After having been frozen in nitrogen, 10-μm-thick sections were cut from the laryngeal muscles in a cryostat. The pH-lability of the enzyme that can be utilized in a classical myosin ATPase reaction permits a differentiation between fiber types I, IIA and IIB. Evidently, this is not possible with every human muscle. The fiber types IIA and IIB of the thyroarytenoid and the posterior cricoarytenoid muscles could be clearly distinguished by means of the inhibition reactivation myofibrillar ATPase technique. Using this method, the myosin ATPase enzyme was initially inhibited by hydroxymer curibenzoate and subsequently reactivated by cysteine. Regarding the incidence of type I and IIA fibers, there was a statistically significant difference between the thyroarytenoid and the posterior cricoarytenoid muscles. The type IIA fiber content was statistically significantly higher in the arytenoid muscle than in the posterior cricoarytenoid muscle. The percentage of type IIB fibers was low, not only in the thyroarytenoid muscle and the posterior cricoarytenoid muscle but also in the other laryngeal muscles. The share of fiber types I, IIA and IIB in the thyroarytenoid muscles varied greatly from one patient to another. This was also true for the other laryngeal muscles. This aspect may be especially significant with regard to an individual's vocal character and vocal fatigability under stress.
- Published
- 1992
47. Preparation of four-color arterial corrosion casts of the laryngeal arteries
- Author
-
G R Klaws and Horst Claassen
- Subjects
Larynx ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Anatomy ,Arteries ,Middle Aged ,Corrosion Casting ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Surgery ,Laryngeal surgery ,Laryngeal skeleton ,business ,Aged - Abstract
The supply areas of the superior and inferior laryngeal arteries were studied in order to plan tissue-sparing laryngeal surgery. Arterial corrosion casts with and without preservation of the laryngeal skeleton were prepared and the supply areas of the superior and inferior laryngeal arteries were distinguished from each other by injecting differently colored methacrylates. The ramifications of the laryngeal arteries could be classified clearly in the macerated specimens which preserved the laryngeal skeleton.
- Published
- 1992
48. [Untitled]
- Author
-
Horst Claassen
- Subjects
Gerontology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Cartilage ,medicine ,Art history ,General Medicine ,Art ,Anatomy ,Developmental Biology ,media_common - Published
- 2004
49. Book review
- Author
-
Horst Claassen
- Subjects
Otorhinolaryngology ,Surgery ,Oral Surgery - Published
- 2002
50. Buchbesprechung
- Author
-
Horst Claassen
- Subjects
Philosophy ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Developmental Biology - Published
- 1994
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