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An optimized medial parapatellar approach to the goat medial femoral condyle
- Source :
- Animal Models and Experimental Medicine, 4(1), 54-58. John Wiley & Sons Inc., Animal Models and Experimental Medicine, Vol 4, Iss 1, Pp 54-58 (2021), Animal Models and Experimental Medicine
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Goats or sheep are the preferred animal model for the preclinical evaluation of cartilage repair techniques due to the similarity of the goat stifle joint to the human knee. The medial femoral condyle of the stifle joint is the preferred site for the assessment of articular cartilage repair, as this is the primary location for this type of lesion in the human knee. Proper surgical exposure of the medial femoral condyle is paramount to obtain reproducible results without surgical error. When applying the standard human medial arthrotomy technique on the goat stifle joint, there are some key aspects to consider in order to prevent destabilization of the extensor apparatus and subsequent postoperative patellar dislocations with associated animal discomfort. This paper describes a modified surgical technique to approach the medial femoral condyle of the caprine stifle joint. The modified technique led to satisfactory exposure without postoperative incidence of patellar luxations and no longāterm adverse effects on the joint.
- Subjects :
- Cartilage, Articular
musculoskeletal diseases
Medicine (General)
goats
medicine.medical_treatment
Stifle joint
Osteoarthritis
ARTICULAR-CARTILAGE DEFECTS
Medial parapatellar approach
Condyle
RECOMMENDATIONS
R5-920
medicine
Articular cartilage repair
Technical Note
Animals
Orthopedic Procedures
Femur
cartilage
Orthodontics
Arthrotomy
REPAIR
business.industry
Medial femoral condyle
Cartilage
condyle
arthrotomy
approach
General Medicine
medicine.disease
Stifle
medicine.anatomical_structure
ANIMAL-MODELS
OSTEOARTHRITIS
Models, Animal
KNEE
business
Epiphyses
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 20965451
- Volume :
- 4
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Animal Models and Experimental Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....fe656ed2f780d1277a5e8ba39fb1961b