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Cell Count and Cell Density Decrease as Age Increases in Cadaveric Pediatric Medial Menisci. Arthroscopy, sports medicine, and rehabilitation Albersheim, M., Fedje-Johnston, W., Carlson, C., Arnoczky, S. P., Toth, F., Shea, K., Harper, L., Rendahl, A., Tompkins, M. 2023; 5 (6): 100795

Abstract

To examine the histologic changes in terms of cellularity, cell density, and nuclear shape in medial meniscal cellularity during skeletal development using pediatric cadaver specimens.Medial menisci from 26 pediatric cadavers, 11 female and 15 male (total 36 menisci), were obtained from tissue bank. Mean age of female donors was 34 months (1-108 months) and of male donors was 52 months (1-132 months). Menisci were processed and embedded in paraffin blocks. Each tissue block containing 6 representative areas of meniscus (anterior root, anterior horn, body [n = 2], posterior horn, and posterior root) was sectioned at 4 microns and stained with hematoxylin and eosin for evaluation of chondrocyte nuclei. Each of the 6 representative areas was imaged at 10×; one image on peripheral one-third of section, the second image on central two-thirds of the section. FIJI imaging software was used to measure cell count, cell density, and nuclear morphology (1 = perfect circle). Data analysis included linear mixed models, Type II analysis of variance tests, and pairwise tests with the Tukey correction to assess statistical significance.Peripheral meniscus was more cellular than central meniscus. The cell count was found to decrease by 14% per year of age. Peripheral cell count decreased at a rate similar to the cell count in the central meniscus. Meniscal cell density was 2× higher peripherally than centrally. Overall average cell density in all locations in the menisci decreased by an average of 14% per year of age.The results of this study reveal decreases in cell count, cell density, and circularity as age increases in cadaveric pediatric medial menisci.To better understand the development of pediatric menisci at a cellular level and use this knowledge in the future on how to maintain the menisci in a younger, healthier state.

View details for DOI 10.1016/j.asmr.2023.100795

View details for PubMedID 37868658

View details for PubMedCentralID PMC10585640