J. Katta
University of Leeds
8 Papers
29 Citations
J. Katta is an academic researcher from University of Leeds. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cartilage & Peptide sequence. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications.
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Papers
Biotribology of articular cartilage—A review of the recent advances
TL;DR: The importance of developing in vitro models as tools not only to understand the cartilage tribological characteristics, but to evaluate current and future cartilage substitution and treatment therapies is discussed.
210
The effect of glycosaminoglycan depletion on the friction and deformation of articular cartilage.
J. Katta,Thomas Stapleton,Eileen Ingham,Z M Jin,John Fisher +4 more
- 01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: The results corroborate the role of GAGs in the compressive and friction properties of articular cartilage and emphasize the need for developing strategies to control GAG loss from diseased articularcartilage tissue.
84
Effect of load variation on the friction properties of articular cartilage
J. Katta,Sainath Shrikant Pawaskar,Zhongmin Jin,Eileen Ingham,John Fisher +4 more
- 01 Mar 2007
TL;DR: While interstitial fluid pressurization of cartilage plays the major role, another extraneous factor or mechanism that influences the friction between cartilage surfaces is needed to completely explain the results observed.
73
Effect of nominal stress on the long term friction, deformation and wear of native and glycosaminoglycan deficient articular cartilage
TL;DR: There was no effect of increasing contact stress levels on the COF and wear of GAG deficient cartilage samples due to the very high deformations observed in these samples and the smoothening of their surfaces under the higher loads, leading to the development of conforming surfaces during articulation.
55
Chondroitin sulphate: an effective joint lubricant?
TL;DR: CS proved to be an effective lubricant for cartilage under mixed-mode lubrication conditions, however, supplemental CS that diffused into the specimens had no influence on the fluid load support of cartilage.
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