ACI vs MACI for knee cartilage repairBoth ACI and MACI for knee cartilage repair follow a two-stage structure: cartilage biopsy with laboratory expansion, then implantation. The difference lies in the second stage's delivery mechanism—ACI injects expanded cells beneath a periosteal patch, while MACI pre-seeds them onto a collagen membrane secured with fibrin glue.Both ACI and MACI for knee cartilage repair follow a two-stage structure: cartilage biopsy with laboratory expansion, then implantation. The difference lies in the second stage's delivery mechanism—ACI injects expanded cells beneath a periosteal patch, while MACI pre-seeds them onto a collagen membrane secured with fibrin glue.
OATS and Mosaicplasty for Knee Cartilage RepairOATS delivers genuine hyaline cartilage — the knee's native resilient material — to repair focal defects in one operation; marrow-stimulation techniques like microfracture instead produce fibrocartilage, scar-like tissue that begins to break down within two to three years under athletic demand.OATS delivers genuine hyaline cartilage — the knee's native resilient material — to repair focal defects in one operation; marrow-stimulation techniques like microfracture instead produce fibrocartilage, scar-like tissue that begins to break down within two to three years under athletic demand.
Autograft or allograft for large knee cartilage defectsKnee cartilage defects smaller than roughly 2 cm² are typically repaired with the patient's own tissue; larger defects require fresh donor grafts because the knee lacks sufficient low-load surface to harvest from safely.Knee cartilage defects smaller than roughly 2 cm² are typically repaired with the patient's own tissue; larger defects require fresh donor grafts because the knee lacks sufficient low-load surface to harvest from safely.
ACI for talar cartilage repairOsteochondral lesions of the talus occur in up to 70% of ankle fractures; defects measuring 2cm² or larger typically undergo autologous chondrocyte implantation, which uses cultured cells rather than bone plugs to restore cartilage but requires medial malleolar osteotomy to access the joint.Osteochondral lesions of the talus occur in up to 70% of ankle fractures; defects measuring 2cm² or larger typically undergo autologous chondrocyte implantation, which uses cultured cells rather than bone plugs to restore cartilage but requires medial malleolar osteotomy to access the joint.
When cartilage repair is the right choiceCartilage repair succeeds for a focal defect in otherwise healthy joint tissue in younger patients, but fails in diffuse arthritis. Lesion size, depth, patient age, and activity level determine the appropriate technique.Cartilage repair succeeds for a focal defect in otherwise healthy joint tissue in younger patients, but fails in diffuse arthritis. Lesion size, depth, patient age, and activity level determine the appropriate technique.
OATS or microfracture for active knee patientsMicrofracture improves early but deteriorates progressively beyond two years because it deposits fibrocartilage, whilst OATS transplants intact cartilage that remains stable long-term.Microfracture improves early but deteriorates progressively beyond two years because it deposits fibrocartilage, whilst OATS transplants intact cartilage that remains stable long-term.
Osteochondral Allograft for Ankle Cartilage DefectsLesions on the talus larger than 15mm fail with microfracture repair; osteochondral allograft instead restores the cartilage and bone using donor tissue, achieving 85% survivorship at ten years.Lesions on the talus larger than 15mm fail with microfracture repair; osteochondral allograft instead restores the cartilage and bone using donor tissue, achieving 85% survivorship at ten years.
Allograft vs autograft for large knee cartilage defectsAutograft for knee cartilage defects larger than roughly 2–4 cm² risks replacing one area of cartilage loss with another at the harvest site. Osteochondral allografts from cadaveric donors eliminate this trade-off and achieve 5-year survival of 79–87.8%.Autograft for knee cartilage defects larger than roughly 2–4 cm² risks replacing one area of cartilage loss with another at the harvest site. Osteochondral allografts from cadaveric donors eliminate this trade-off and achieve 5-year survival of 79–87.8%.
How ACI and MACI differ for cartilage repairMACI pre-seeds cultured chondrocytes onto a collagen membrane fixed with fibrin glue, eliminating the sutures required in earlier ACI variants. The technique enables arthroscopic implantation and supports faster recovery than open surgical approaches.MACI pre-seeds cultured chondrocytes onto a collagen membrane fixed with fibrin glue, eliminating the sutures required in earlier ACI variants. The technique enables arthroscopic implantation and supports faster recovery than open surgical approaches.
ChondroFiller injection vs knee replacementChondroFiller is a collagen scaffold injection that recruits the patient's own repair cells to treat focal cartilage defects. Knee replacement suits end-stage, widespread wear; the choice between them depends on imaging findings, not age.ChondroFiller is a collagen scaffold injection that recruits the patient's own repair cells to treat focal cartilage defects. Knee replacement suits end-stage, widespread wear; the choice between them depends on imaging findings, not age.
Injectable scaffold vs surgical knee cartilage repairFor focal knee cartilage defects, injectable collagen scaffolds provide a non-surgical treatment by acting as an acellular matrix that guides the patient's own progenitor cells in regenerating cartilage-like tissue, overcoming cartilage's inability to repair itself due to lacking blood supply.For focal knee cartilage defects, injectable collagen scaffolds provide a non-surgical treatment by acting as an acellular matrix that guides the patient's own progenitor cells in regenerating cartilage-like tissue, overcoming cartilage's inability to repair itself due to lacking blood supply.
When is it too late for cartilage repair?Once cartilage loss becomes generalised and surfaces contact bone, no restoration procedure works; repair is viable only for focal defects.Once cartilage loss becomes generalised and surfaces contact bone, no restoration procedure works; repair is viable only for focal defects.