Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The goal was to determine maturational changes in the human cricoid cartilage.
STUDY DESIGN: The study involved immunohisto-chemical staining of collagen II (a marker of proliferating chondrocytes), matrilin-1 (a marker of post-proliferative chondrocytes), and collagen X (a marker of hypertrophic chondrocytes). Specimens included uninjured human cricoid cartilages at 18 and 41 weeks' gestation and 1, 4, and 13 years postpartum.
RESULTS: This study demonstrated that type II collagen peaks in concentration at approximately 41 weeks' gestation. Matrilin-1 is present in progressively lower concentration in the central core of the cricoid ring, but the peripheries of the ring contain the protein in relatively high concentration. Type X collagen is not expressed in the age groups tested. CONCLUSIONS: These biochemical markers lend further support to a chondrocyte proliferative phase that slows between 1 and 4 years of age. Chondrocytes then enter a phase histologically similar to the hypertrophic phase but are biochemically different than hypertrophic chondrocytes destined for endochondral ossification.(Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg 2000;123:174-8.)
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