1. Microstructural features of subchondral radiolucent lesions in the medial femoral condyle of juvenile Thoroughbreds: A microcomputed tomography and histological analysis.
- Author
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Lemirre T, Santschi EM, Girard CA, Fogarty U, Janes JG, Richard H, and Laverty S
- Subjects
- Animals, Cross-Sectional Studies, Epiphyses, Femur diagnostic imaging, Fibrin, Horses, X-Ray Microtomography, Cartilage, Articular pathology, Horse Diseases diagnostic imaging, Horse Diseases pathology, Osteochondrosis veterinary
- Abstract
Background: The aetiology of equine medial femoral condyle (MFC) subchondral bone radiolucencies (SR) is unknown., Objectives: Characterise the microstructural structural features of MFC SR in juvenile Thoroughbreds with microcomputed tomography (μCT) and histology., Study Design: Cross-sectional post-mortem study., Methods: Distal femurs were collected at post-mortem. Conventional tomodensitometry was employed to scout for MFCs with and without SR lesions (SR+ and SR-, respectively). Group 1 were CT MFC SR+ and Group 2 age-matched SR- controls. Both underwent μCT and histological analysis. Group 3 CT MFC SR- foals, <6 months, were selected to search for chondronecrosis. Histological sections, processed from the lesion (Group 1) and a corresponding site in Groups 2 and 3, were assessed for chondronecrosis, fibrin, fibroplasia and osteochondral separation. Group 3 sections were surveyed for chondronecrosis alone., Results: A total of 178 femurs from 89 Thoroughbreds were harvested. Of these horses 19.1% (95% CI: 10.9%-27.3%) were CT MFC SR+ (17/23; 7.46 ± 4.36 months) and met the inclusion criteria for Group 1. Group 2 included 30 CT MFC SR- specimens (5.00 ± 2.73 months) and Group 3 had 44 CT MFC SR- s (2.68 ± 1.74 months). SR were located axially in foals <7 months of age, and centrally thereafter. All SRs had areas of thickened cartilage on histology and separation at the osteochondral junction containing fibrin (acute event) and fibroplasia (chronicity) in 73.9% (17/23; 95% CI: 56%-91.9%). In Group 1 specimens, chondronecrosis was present in 82.6% (19/23; 95% CI: 67.1%-98.1%) but four MFC SR+ had no evidence of chondronecrosis. Chondronecrosis was not detected in the Group 3 foal MFCs., Main Limitations: No longitudinal follow-up., Conclusions: The absence of chondronecrosis, pathognomic of osteochondrosis, in four MFC SR+s and in all of the CT MFC SR- foals suggests that osteochondrosis is not the cause, or the only cause, of these lesions and favours trauma as an alternate aetiological hypothesis., (© 2021 EVJ Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
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