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1 al properties of this important component of cartilage.
2 iation of MF-activated SSCs toward articular cartilage.
3 lage that was also found in undamaged DDH-OA cartilage.
4 s essential to help stem cells create stable cartilage.
5 rtrophic chondrocytes in articular calcified cartilage.
6 ter was measured from the mid-portion of the cartilage.
7 stem are strikingly similar to that of human cartilage.
8 esent in many other tissues such as skin and cartilage.
9 ex vivo cartilage explants and in vivo joint cartilage.
10 tion-driven degradation in tissue-engineered cartilage.
11 nal properties and biomechanical behavior of cartilage.
12 tion (ACI) in order to heal the damaged knee cartilage.
13 ificantly lower AFL compared to normal human cartilage.
14 ine the viscoelastic properties of articular cartilage.
15 , and the medial laminal thickness of the ET cartilage.
16 t composition and collagen disruption in AKU cartilage.
17 he low intrinsic repair potential of hyaline cartilage.
18 related to the proteoglycan concentration in cartilage.
19 plasty, 21 facial feminization, and 31 voice/cartilage.
20 an be used to infer the biochemical state of cartilage.
21 ss, and volume of the femoral head articular cartilage.
22 it low friction and low wear against natural cartilages.
23 les, a robust tympanum and several accessory cartilages.
24 rsible, progressive destruction of articular cartilage(1).
25                                              Cartilage abnormalities seen in this HGPS model resemble
26                                    Articular cartilage (AC) and intervertebral discs are cartilaginou
27 D exhibits a protective effect in engineered cartilage against interferon type II.
28 nsion in the molecular mechanisms underlying cartilage ageing and osteoarthritis through the dysregul
29 emonstrate that snoRNA expression changes in cartilage ageing, and osteoarthritis and in osteoarthrit
30 ss of Tbx4(+) tracheal mesoderm and tracheal cartilage agenesis.
31 t of synthetic composite gel-based articular cartilage analog suggests new avenues to explore materia
32 to SOX9's dual role as a master regulator of cartilage and an important regulator of crypt stem cell
33 ch promotes FCSC differentiation toward both cartilage and bone lineages, but inhibits adipogenesis.
34 c invasive tissue that causes destruction of cartilage and bone.
35 ceptor interactions, and MPC trajectories to cartilage and bone.
36 cell-derived mesenchyme surrounding Meckel's cartilage and in the palatal shelves in Med23(fx/fx);Wnt
37 F injections which resulted in a decrease in cartilage and increase of bone volume.
38      3T MRI provides an evaluation of the ET cartilage and isthmus level, which are small but importa
39  tendons, and bones led to hypoplasia of the cartilage and its attachment to tendons and muscle.
40 s is stronger than an unfused one spanned by cartilage and ligaments.
41 ns, sox10(+) perichondrial cells surrounding cartilage and nkx2.5(+) cells surrounding muscle.
42  with decreased expression in osteoarthritic cartilage and osteoarthritic chondrocytes.
43 ound in a nasal septal biopsy, i.e., hyaline cartilage and perichondrium, for a novel tissue identity
44 fiber orientation more similar to the normal cartilage and protects the subchondral bone plate from e
45 ndyle superficial zone niche that regenerate cartilage and repair joint injury.
46                                 The periodic cartilage and smooth muscle structures in mammalian trac
47 sion to control mesenchymal specification to cartilage and smooth muscle, coupling epithelial identit
48 nchi and on upper airways in 2 compartments, cartilage and submucosal glands, but they were surprisin
49  elucidated the molecular cross-talk between cartilage and synovium in osteoarthritis, the most wides
50  suggest that Gdf5 upregulation in articular cartilage and synovium is a generic response to knee inj
51                   Layered structure of bone, cartilage and the bone-cartilage interface must be taken
52 y progressive structural changes in both the cartilage and the underlying subchondral bone.
53 defects contain damage to both the articular cartilage and underlying subchon- dral bone, which remai
54 uctured interfaces between tendons/ligaments/cartilages and bones, we report that bonding ordered nan
55  for diverse applications such as artificial cartilages and tendons, robust antifouling coatings, and
56 collagen triple helix in pigmented AKU human cartilage, and in cartilage from patients with osteoarth
57 tations were not identified in the overgrown cartilage, and thus local cartilage overgrowth likely re
58 drocyte death, lower chondrocyte numbers per cartilage area, and thickening of subchondral bone.
59 lage post-DMM, and was increased in human OA cartilage as determined by immunohistochemistry and micr
60 ect development and homeostasis of articular cartilage, as evidenced by the fact that aberrant FGF si
61         Advances in quantitative morphologic cartilage assessment and semiquantitative whole-organ as
62 al microRNAs including upregulation of known cartilage associated microRNAs and those transcribed fro
63 age can be detected in chondrocytes from DDH cartilage before histological manifestations of degenera
64  provide a promising strategy for iPSC-based cartilage bioengineering for study of disease mechanisms
65 s placebo and substantially reduced bone and cartilage biomarker levels.
66 applications, with a focus on how 3D-printed cartilage, bone and skin can be designed for individual
67 kness, suprapatellar effusion, and irregular cartilage-bone margin, were similar between hemiplegic a
68 tion of the lubricating superficial layer of cartilage by mediating interaction between lubricin and
69 and its hallmark is degradation of articular cartilage by proteolytic enzymes leading to loss of join
70 e development of the extracellular matrix in cartilage by regulating both anabolic and catabolic cell
71 ene expression data from beta-NGF stimulated cartilage callus explants show a promotion in markers as
72  mature nasal chondrocyte-derived engineered cartilage can be assessed with Raman spectroscopy for th
73 her cellular changes in chondrocytes from OA cartilage can be detected in chondrocytes from DDH carti
74 (FCD) for delivering small molecule drugs to cartilage cell and matrix sites.
75 aracterizing running-induced changes in knee cartilage composition.
76  and the proteoglycan aggrecan contribute to cartilage compression resistance and are necessary for h
77               Our work shows that muscle and cartilage connective tissues harbor progenitor cells cap
78                   Growth plate and articular cartilage constitute a single anatomical entity early in
79  aims to develop transplantable hyaline-like cartilage constructs by stimulating MSC chondrogenic dif
80 s for developing composite tissue-engineered cartilage constructs for regenerative medicine applicati
81  for fabricating scaffold-free, hyaline-like cartilage constructs from MSCs for future transplantable
82         This approach is applied to engineer cartilage constructs with a depth-dependent cellularity
83 e studied ear AVMs to determine if overgrown cartilage contained AVM-causing mutations.
84                         Human osteoarthritis cartilage contains chondrocytes (OAC) and mesenchymal st
85  body weight, tissue source, and the type of cartilage damage as critical properties that significant
86  agonist, CGS21680, significantly reduced OA cartilage damage in a murine model of obesity-induced OA
87 urther, critical thresholds at 6% and 64% of cartilage damage in area, and 22% and 56% in depth were
88 ector in an orthotopic large animal model of cartilage damage is reported here.
89 ACVR1 in both cell types, LDN193189 inhibits cartilage degeneration through suppressing hypertrophy a
90                                    Low grade cartilage degeneration, predominantly loss of proteoglyc
91 ammation leads to chondrocyte senescence and cartilage degeneration, resulting in osteoarthritis (OA)
92 tory phenotype (SASP) has been implicated in cartilage degradation and OA.
93 mation following joint trauma contributes to cartilage degradation and progression of post traumatic
94 s to provide a label-free optical readout of cartilage degradation that could enable earlier detectio
95                 After knee loading, however, cartilage degradation was effectively prevented, and the
96 tic osteoarthritis (PTOA) is associated with cartilage degradation, ultimately leading to disability
97 reciprocally modulate each other to regulate cartilage degradation.
98 is still not known, nor how it induces joint cartilage degradation.
99 ng cartilage lesions, leading to accelerated cartilage degradation.
100 ying TIMP3 to specifically target a class of cartilage-degrading proteinases and to minimize adverse
101 h translational potential for enabling intra-cartilage delivery of a broad array of small molecule OA
102   As a result, this study suggests articular cartilage derived-CPSC can be used as a novel tool for c
103  accumulation of leukocytes in the synovium, cartilage destruction and bone erosion.
104                         The primary cause of cartilage destruction is considered to be the presence o
105 erexpression proved to be less protective in cartilage destruction than [-1A]TIMP3 at late stages of
106 -/-) mice, whereas the inflammation area and cartilage destruction was comparable to wild-type mice.
107 t osteoarthritis (TMJ OA) leads to permanent cartilage destruction, jaw dysfunction, and compromises
108 injury to investigate inflammatory response, cartilage development, bone deposition, and mechanical i
109  MicroRNAs have been shown to play a role in cartilage development, homeostasis and breakdown during
110 nown to play an important role in regulating cartilage development.
111 is allows tumor, muscle, tendon, ligament or cartilage disease monitoring for therapy and general lab
112  context for observed methylation changes in cartilage diseases such as osteoarthritis.
113                                      Because cartilage does not have blood vessels, we studied ear AV
114  relative proteoglycan concentration of knee cartilage due to water flow are mitigated within 24 hour
115 ichondral progenitor cells that generate new cartilage during adult growth, and we show that persiste
116 ound presence of cilia on growth plate (GP), cartilage endplate (EP) annulus fibrosus (AF), and nucle
117 ur data suggest that AFL can detect areas of cartilage erosion and may potentially be utilised as a m
118 nd decreased with applied load; GAG depleted cartilage exhibited higher hydraulic permeability than e
119 y better than unmodified Dex over 2 weeks in cartilage explant culture models of OA.
120                 Cytokine-induced biochemical cartilage explant degradation occurs near the sides, top
121 n creep and recovery tests were conducted on cartilage explants (N = 10), and the resulting mechanica
122  miRs were mechanically-regulated in ex vivo cartilage explants and in vivo joint cartilage.
123 a-5p were significantly increased in ex vivo cartilage explants subjected to increasing load magnitud
124                  Bovine full-depth articular cartilage explants were loaded to 2.5 MPa (physiological
125 creasing load magnitude and in in vivo joint cartilage exposed to abnormal loading.
126 hanical forces act on these complexes in the cartilage extracellular matrix, motivating the need for
127 ion-driven degradation, and also predisposes cartilage for further biomechanical degradation.
128 ination of frequency-dependent properties of cartilage for more comprehensive and impactful results f
129 m-cell population can be induced to generate cartilage for treatment of localized chondral disease in
130 s from MaR1-treated mice displayed decreased cartilage formation and increased bone deposition which
131 d myocardial fibrosis presented with bone or cartilage formation, and increased collagen levels in ti
132  in injured synovium in prospective areas of cartilage formation, where it inversely correlated with
133 ical behaviour of bone tumours, particularly cartilage-forming tumours, and tumours are now further s
134 haracterized undamaged and damaged articular cartilage from 22 participants having hip replacement su
135                In one model, clinical TMJ-OA cartilage from 5 different samples in TMJ-OA cartilage p
136                               Further, human cartilage from OA patients presents a significantly lowe
137 lix in pigmented AKU human cartilage, and in cartilage from patients with osteoarthritis.
138                                    Articular cartilage from young, old and OA knees was used in a mic
139 ifferentiation including changes at many key cartilage gene loci.
140 nsequences of which has potential to improve cartilage generation for tissue engineering purposes and
141 d for protein secretion in chondrocytes, and cartilage growth and bone mineralization in medaka fish.
142 AP5SA or knockout of Lats1/2 do not increase cartilage growth, but instead lead to catastrophic malfo
143 ncreasing frequency and applied load; mature cartilage had generally the highest moduli and GAG deple
144         Nasal chondrocyte-derived engineered cartilage has been demonstrated to be safe and feasible
145                   Snorc (Small NOvel Rich in Cartilage) has been identified as a chondrocyte-specific
146 ually, yet how this exercise influences knee cartilage health is poorly understood.
147 0.001) but did not alter ligament structure, cartilage health, or chondrocyte homeostasis.
148 critical autocrine factor for maintenance of cartilage homeostasis and here we report that injection
149                               A charge-based cartilage homing drug delivery platform like this can el
150 issues, including healthy and diseased adult cartilage, identified chondrocyte-specific regions of hy
151 XL2 has beneficial functions in human TMJ-OA cartilage implants and promotes gender-specific anabolic
152 rks and extracellular matrix in human TMJ-OA cartilage implants in vivo.
153  response for mechanical characterization of cartilage in a controlled, ex vivo environment.
154 idly penetrate through the full thickness of cartilage in high concentration and have long intra-cart
155 nhibitor with beneficial effects on bone and cartilage in preclinical osteoarthritis models.
156 al stem-cell (SSC) populations to regenerate cartilage in relation to age, a possible contributor to
157 on of the transcriptome of tissue-engineered cartilage in response to IL-1beta and TNF-alpha using an
158 eatment also improved swelling and preserved cartilage in the affected knees in a rat model of establ
159  Here, we show that embryonic development of cartilage in the skate (Leucoraja erinacea) mirrors that
160 ets' chondrogenic differentiation to hyaline cartilage in vitro via post-contraction cytoskeletal reo
161  is anabolic to human and mouse TMJ condylar cartilage in vivo and evaluate the protective and anabol
162   It is challenging to monitor the status of cartilage in vivo and this study explores the use of aut
163            Physiological YAP target genes in cartilage include Ctgf, Cyr61 and several matrix remodel
164              Mechanical loading on articular cartilage induces various mechanical stresses and strain
165 pain resulting from degradation of articular cartilage, inflammation of the synovial lining, and chan
166 relates with ability to spontaneously repair cartilage injuries.
167 of the medial meniscus (DMM) and after acute cartilage injury and repair.
168 ed structure of bone, cartilage and the bone-cartilage interface must be taken into account in the ca
169                                    Articular cartilage is a load-bearing tissue found in animal and h
170                          Mammalian articular cartilage is an avascular tissue with poor capacity for
171 dark brown pigmentation, especially of joint cartilage, leading to severe early osteoarthropathy.
172 safe and feasible for the treatment of focal cartilage lesions with promising preliminary evidences o
173  chondrogenic precursor cells from repairing cartilage lesions, leading to accelerated cartilage degr
174 of GRASLND resulted in lower accumulation of cartilage-like extracellular matrix in a pellet assay, w
175 ing HMP deviation in order to minimize joint cartilage loading in sub-areas of the knee.
176 -21-5p and miR-27a-5p in ex vivo and in vivo cartilage loading models.
177                      The avascular nature of cartilage makes it a unique tissue(1-4), but whether and
178 usive transport through the dense, avascular cartilage matrix comprised of negatively charged glycosa
179 a CRISPR-dCas9-VP64 - significantly enhanced cartilage matrix production.
180                                              Cartilage matrix-related proteins were assessed by enzym
181 oading, the unloading (recovery) response of cartilage may also enable determination of mechanical re
182 ginate at the chondrocyte level and that DDH cartilage may provide a novel opportunity to study these
183                                  mAv's intra-cartilage mean uptake was found to be 112x and 33x the e
184   Despite the well-established dependence of cartilage mechanical properties on the frequency of the
185             Thus, measurement of the in vivo cartilage mechanical response may serve as an earlier in
186 mation and producing molecules essential for cartilage metabolism.
187 on in vivo, and instead functions to control cartilage morphogenesis via regulation of the extracellu
188 ments in MRI techniques capable of assessing cartilage morphologic features and the methods for evalu
189 orphome to robustly predict changes in bone, cartilage, muscle and fibrous gene expression induced by
190 s were present in the tissue adjacent to the cartilage [mutant allele frequency (MAF) 6-8%], and were
191                      The scaffold mimics the cartilage niche, allowing both cell populations to maint
192 e that changes in the mechanical function of cartilage occur as degeneration progresses during OA.
193 ain tissues and elastic fibers in developing cartilage of mice.
194 d sheath and in close contact with the basal cartilage of the pectoral fins; cells of this epithelium
195  attenuates pro-inflammatory signaling in OA cartilage of the TMJ and knee joint, induces chondroprot
196                                 The gene for cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (COMP) was the most
197                     Both exhibited increased cartilage oligomeric protein, COMP mRNA expression.
198  connective tissues (tendons, ligaments, and cartilages) on bones in many animals can maintain high t
199 drocytes has potential for repairing damaged cartilage or to generate disease models via gene editing
200 se findings suggest that early events in DDH cartilage originate at the chondrocyte level and that DD
201 d in the overgrown cartilage, and thus local cartilage overgrowth likely results from the effects of
202 nafarnib monotherapy did not improve bone or cartilage parameters, but treatment combinations with pr
203 kate, transcriptional features of developing cartilage persist into adulthood, both in peripheral cho
204 n of our work is direct visualization of the cartilage phenotype defining predictive ability as our t
205 cartilage from 5 different samples in TMJ-OA cartilage plugs were implanted subcutaneously in nude mi
206                    The plug also comprises a Cartilage Portion (component 2) which is a 3D printed ge
207                                              Cartilage Portion is secured on top of the Bone Portion
208 ting of polycaprolactone (PCL) on top of the Cartilage Portion to facilitate sliding of the knee join
209  modified to have specific affinity with the Cartilage Portion.
210 ace while allowing nutrients delivery to the Cartilage Portion.
211 fic knobs in the 3D printed construct of the Cartilage Portion.
212 Gdf5 expression was upregulated in articular cartilage post-DMM, and was increased in human OA cartil
213  different intervertebral soft tissue types (cartilage, probable notochord) seen in extant reptiles.
214           In this study we propose articular cartilage progenitor/stem cells (CPSC) as a valid altern
215  pain, but it significantly reduced bone and cartilage progression with a reassuring safety profile.
216 analyses provide a limited representation of cartilage properties thus greatly reducing the impact of
217 ion of senescence in the synovial tissue and cartilage protection.
218 sms have been suggested to result in loss of cartilage proteoglycans, the source of tissue fixed char
219 the rotating frame (T(1rho)) mapping of knee cartilage, reducing the usual long scan time.
220  tissue engineering approaches for articular cartilage regeneration increasingly focus on mesenchymal
221         Effective engineering approaches for cartilage regeneration involve a combination of cells an
222 rom MSCs for future transplantable articular cartilage regeneration therapies.
223  stem cells (MSCs) are important sources for cartilage regeneration.
224 ng tissue engineered constructs for bone and cartilage regeneration.
225 erentiation and are a potential approach for cartilage regeneration.
226 ts therapeutic potential in the treatment of cartilage-related diseases, such as osteoarthritis.
227 Targeted drug delivery to joint tissues like cartilage remains a challenge that has prevented clinica
228  a unique model for adult chondrogenesis and cartilage repair and may serve as inspiration for novel
229 ng-based treatment of osteoarthritis and for cartilage repair in animal models and clinical trials ar
230  Gdf5 expression was also upregulated during cartilage repair in mice and was switched on in injured
231                                              Cartilage repair in osteoarthritic patients remains a ch
232 enabled precise prediction of post-treatment cartilage repair scores with coefficient of determinatio
233 w-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMMSC) for cartilage repair strategies after trauma.
234 rformed a meta-analysis on MSC therapies for cartilage repair using machine learning.
235 gmented microfracture significantly improves cartilage repair with a collagen fiber orientation more
236  therapeutic solution for targeted articular cartilage repair, allowing for a controlled and minimall
237  critical properties involved in MSC-induced cartilage repair, and adapted for other clinical indicat
238 25 million MSCs was found to achieve optimal cartilage repair.
239  critical properties that significant impact cartilage repair.
240 r investigative methods, but their uptake in cartilage research is limited by the highly specialised
241 ge in high concentration and have long intra-cartilage residence time in both healthy and arthritic c
242 cing tissue specificity and prolonging intra-cartilage residence time of OA drugs.
243  in healthy and arthritic (50% GAG depleted) cartilage, respectively.
244 and trypsinased (as model of osteoarthritis) cartilage samples to determine the dynamic shear moduli
245  in SAMP8 at 6 weeks than SAMR1, while OARSI cartilage scores became higher only at 14 weeks.
246                                              Cartilage-specific expression of nls-YAP5SA or knockout
247 aluate the protective and anabolic effect on cartilage-specific factors.
248                            However, in vivo, cartilage-specific knockout of Yap/Taz does not prevent
249  joints and to explore the role of calcified-cartilage stiffness on the biomechanics of healthy and p
250 bone structure and mechanical properties and cartilage structural parameters, which ameliorate the mu
251                                      Ex vivo cartilage studies indicate that changes in the mechanica
252 ated mechano-regulation of miRs in articular cartilage subjected to 'physiological' and 'non-physiolo
253 ifferentiated cell sheets adhere directly to cartilage surfaces via retention of adhesion molecules w
254 (mean +/- SEM) patellar, tibial, and femoral cartilage T1rho relaxation times significantly decreased
255 d for alternative experimental approaches to cartilage testing to be deployed in research and clinica
256 e progressors and nonprogressors on baseline cartilage texture maps, which achieved a robust test acc
257 e early biochemical patterns of fissuring in cartilage that define future onset of OA.
258 staining revealed changes in damaged OA-only cartilage that was also found in undamaged DDH-OA cartil
259                Unlike appendicular articular cartilage, the TMJ has two distinct functions as the syn
260 e no bone contact with the ossified Meckel's cartilage; the latter is loosely lodged on the medial re
261 ly loss of glycosaminoglycans, and decreased cartilage thickness and volume.
262          Other secondary end points included cartilage thickness on quantitative MRI and type I and I
263 atellar effusion and reduced lateral femoral cartilage thickness were more prevalent in the hemiplegi
264  included reduced lateral and medial femoral cartilage thickness, suprapatellar effusion, and irregul
265 d and 0.004 for 200 mg/d) and medial femoral cartilage thinning (P = 0.023 for 100 mg/d and 0.125 for
266        Synthetic pigment and pigmented human cartilage tissue both showed hydroquinone-resembling NMR
267 ged in engineering MSC behavior for bone and cartilage tissue engineering, including gene delivery, g
268 be a viable alternative to growth factors in cartilage tissue engineering.
269                There have been no reports of cartilage to bone transdifferentiation or vasculature in
270 ght to characterize putative vasculature and cartilage to bone transdifferentiation using healthy and
271 pregulated and coupled with cells undergoing cartilage to bone transdifferentiation, which may contri
272  drugs that target angiogenesis or block the cartilage to bone transformation.
273 and the molecular switches that occur during cartilage to bone transformation.
274 ss, inflammation, oxidative stress, bone and cartilage turnover, blood pressure, and blood lipids.
275  blood pressure, markers of inflammation, or cartilage turnover.
276 rospectively assess the Eustachian tube (ET) cartilage using 3 Tesla (3T) magnetic resonance imaging
277 d temporal changes of FCD content in injured cartilage using a novel finite element model that incorp
278                        In contrast, tracheal cartilage, vasculature, and neural innervation patterns
279 residence time in both healthy and arthritic cartilage via weak-reversible binding with negatively ch
280 ow higher reductions of knee joint articular cartilage volume after 75 minutes of running.
281  outcome was absolute change in tibiofemoral cartilage volume assessed using MRI over 24 months (the
282 d with placebo, did not significantly reduce cartilage volume loss over 24 months.
283                  We found significantly more cartilage volume reductions in the medial knee compartme
284                         We also found higher cartilage volume reductions on the medial tibia when run
285                       Change in tibiofemoral cartilage volume was not significantly different between
286           We quantified knee joint articular cartilage volumes before and after the run using a 3.0-T
287         In the OA and OPOA groups, articular cartilage was degenerated and Osteoarthritis Research So
288                                       Intact cartilage was enriched for homeostatic and hypertrophic
289 and hypertrophic chondrocytes, while damaged cartilage was enriched for prefibro- and fibro-, regulat
290                                              Cartilage was separated from its surrounding tissue and
291 In the patient group, the diameter of the ET cartilage was significantly smaller than in the control
292 poptosis rates in articular and growth plate cartilage were similar between groups, homozygous mitoch
293  the Hippo pathway during the development of cartilage, which forms the majority of the skeleton.
294 lagen levels in tissues adjacent to the bone/cartilage, while unaffected hearts did not present with
295 lvic cartilaginous symphysis-a noncapsulated cartilage with a naturally high endogenous expression of
296 ng vasculature with osteoprogenitors replace cartilage with bone.
297 s able to produce 3D-T(1rho) mapping of knee cartilage with lower error than CS.
298 y reported that treatment of ex vivo porcine cartilage with proteolytic enzymes resulted in decreased
299  collagen II immunostaining in undamaged DDH cartilage, with no evidence of augmented cell death by a
300 l bone turnover and hypertrophy in calcified cartilage, yet additional mechanical or metabolic stimul

 
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