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Distribution of cartilage thickness on the head of the human first metatarsal bone

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2001

CAROL MUEHLEMAN
Affiliation:
Department of Anatomy and Department of Biochemistry, Rush Medical College, Rush-Presbyterian-St Lukes Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA
KLAUS E. KUETTNER
Affiliation:
Department of Anatomy and Department of Biochemistry, Rush Medical College, Rush-Presbyterian-St Lukes Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA
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Abstract

Articular hyaline cartilage takes on the contours of the subchondral bone on which it lies, but its thickness varies between joints, within a single joint and within a single articular surface. Previous studies have correlated articular cartilage thickness distribution with the degree of stress and weight bearing on joint surfaces, but few studies have considered the thickness of the calcified cartilage in relation to these parameters. Here we report a correlation between the cartilage thickness distribution and weight bearing distribution on the head of the 1st metatarsal bone, a component of one of the major weight bearing joints in the lower extremity during the gait cycle. The greatest total and uncalcified articular cartilage thickness was found on the central and lateral distal aspects of the metatarsal head, a region that receives maximal ground reactive force during the propulsive phase of the normal gait cycle. Although the thickness of the calcified cartilage was correlated with the thickness of the uncalcified cartilage, it varied to a lesser extent across the articular surface than did that of the uncalcified cartilage.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2000

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