grant

The adaptive response of skeletal muscle, bone, and cartilage to severe knee trauma involving ACL disruption with and without concomitant injury to the meniscus

Organization UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT & ST AGRIC COLLEGELocation BURLINGTON, UNITED STATESPosted 1 Jul 2020Deadline 30 Jun 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2023ACL injuryACL ruptureACL tearAddressAffectAncillary StudyAnterior Cruciate LigamentArchitectureBMIBMI percentileBMI z-scoreBody TissuesBody mass indexBone structureCartilageCartilage MatrixCartilaginous TissueClinical TreatmentClinical TrialsContralateralDataData BasesDatabasesDiseaseDisorderEngineering / ArchitectureEvolutionExtremitiesFutureGeometryIndividualInjuryInterventionIntervention StrategiesInvestigationJointsKneeKnee jointKnowledgeLimb structureLimbsMediatingMedical RehabilitationMeniscusMeniscus structure of jointMuscleMuscle TissueNon-TrunkOperative ProceduresOperative Surgical ProceduresParentsPathologyPatientsPersonsPopulationPredispositionPreventionProcessProspective StudiesQOLQuality of lifeQuetelet indexReconstructive Surgical ProceduresRehabilitationRehabilitation therapyResearchRetrospective StudiesRiskSeminalSeveritiesSkeletal MuscleStructureSurgicalSurgical InterventionsSurgical ProcedureSusceptibilityThickThicknessTimeTissuesTraumaTraumatic ArthritisTraumatic ArthropathyVoluntary Muscleanterior cruciate ligament injuryanterior cruciate ligament ruptureanterior cruciate ligament teararticular cartilagebonecostdata baseearly onsetextremity injuryextremity traumainjuriesinjury to extremityinjury to meniscusinterventional strategyjoint damagejoint injuryjoint traumaknowledge baselimb injurylimb traumameniscus injurymuscle structuremuscularmuscular structureparentpost-traumatic osteoarthritisprospectivereconstructionreconstruction surgeryreconstructive surgeryrehab therapyrehabilitativerehabilitative therapyresponsesexskeletal structuresurgerysymptom treatmentsymptomatic treatmenttreat symptomtrial regimentrial treatment
Sign up free to applyApply link · pipeline · email alerts
— or —

Get email alerts for similar roles

Weekly digest · no password needed · unsubscribe any time

Full Description

Project Summary:
Post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) is debilitating due to its early onset, predisposition to affect younger,

active individuals and the need for earlier surgical and rehabilitative interventions, all of which decrease quality

of life. More broadly, 12% of OA cases are due to joint trauma (12.7 million people), costing $3 billion/yr.

Injuries of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and meniscus are the most common concerns that place

individuals at increased risk of developing PTOA about the knee. However, a dilemma exists in the treatment

of PTOA because we do not understand how the severity of the injury affects the adaptive responses of the

limb (muscle, bone, and articular cartilage), nor how these adaptations are modified by concomitant meniscus

injury, the subject's sex, BMI and joint geometry. Moreover, it is unknown how these adaptive responses are

associated with changes in early markers of the PTOA disease process. These knowledge gaps represent

critical barriers to developing more effective, early PTOA treatment paradigms that are informed by an

understanding of adaptions in skeletal muscle, bone and articular cartilage. To date, no study has

prospectively characterized subjects prior to ACL injury and then evaluated the adaptive response of the limb

to ACL rupture and surgical reconstruction. Our current knowledge base is built entirely on retrospective

studies, and consequently we propose a prospective study that will evaluate two aims.

Aim 1: Characterize the adaptive changes in skeletal muscle size and function, bone architecture, and

articular cartilage matrix components that occur in response to severe knee trauma; and determine how

these changes differ depending on the type of trauma (ACL disruption with and without concomitant injury to

the menisci), the patient's sex, BMI, and joint geometry.

Aim 2: Assess the effects of severe knee trauma on change in thickness of the articular cartilage (an early

marker of PTOA) and determine if these effects are modified by structures involved in the trauma (ACL

disruption with and without concomitant meniscus injury), the patient's sex, BMI, and joint geometry; and

mediated by adaptive changes in skeletal muscle size and function, bone architecture, and articular cartilage

matrix components.

The study will provide data on the integrative, adaptive response of multiple tissues of the injured limb to knee

trauma and surgery and builds logically upon the parent investigation. The study will provide a mechanistic

understanding of the evolution of knee joint pathology that leads to PTOA, and the modifying effects of sex,

BMI and joint geometry. Knowledge from this study will address critical barriers to progress in PTOA treatment

by determining how the severity of the trauma affects cartilage structure at a time when interventions will be

effective for prevention of incident or worsening PTOA: the barrier to trials focused on treatment of PTOA.

Grant Number: 5R01AR076765-04
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Bruce Beynnon

Sign up free to get the apply link, save to pipeline, and set email alerts.

Sign up free →

Agency Plan

7-day free trial

Unlock procurement & grants

Upgrade to access active tenders from World Bank, UNDP, ADB and more — with email alerts and pipeline tracking.

$29.99 / month

  • 🔔Email alerts for new matching tenders
  • 🗂️Track tenders in your pipeline
  • 💰Filter by contract value
  • 📥Export results to CSV
  • 📌Save searches with one click
Start 7-day free trial →