Microscope with screenshot of MSC cells adhering to plastic with Dr. Thomas Koch and PhD candidate Sarah Lepage.

Microscope with screenshot of MSC cells adhering to plastic with Dr. Thomas Koch and PhD candidate Sarah Lepage.

“It’s approximately four millimeters in diameter,” exclaimed Ontario Veterinary College researcher, Thomas Koch, unable to contain his excitement. The tiny disk of equine cartilage, manufactured in the OVC lab, is full of potential.

A cartilage injury can mean the end of an athlete’s career. Damaged joint cartilage does not repair on its own and often leads to early osteoarthritis.

Great progress has been made, in Koch’s lab, by PhD student Sarah Lepage, in collaboration with Dr. Rita Kandel from the University of Toronto. They are putting together a protocol for making tissue engineered cartilage constructs. The next step will be evaluating them in live horses. “We are standing on the shoulders of research pioneered by Dr. Mark Hurtig and Kandel,” says Koch, crediting the developers of the mosaic grafting technique of bone and cartilage for sheep and horses. The graft keeps transplanted tissue in place for the healing process to begin.

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