Objectives. Recent studies have shown that systemic injection of rapamycin can prevent the development of osteoarthritis (OA)-like changes in human chondrocytes and reduce the severity of experimental OA. However, the systemic injection of rapamycin leads to many side effects. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of
Objectives.
Objective. To study the effect of hyaluronic acid (HA) on local anaesthetic
chondrotoxicity in vitro. Methods. Chondrocytes were harvested from bovine femoral condyle cartilage
and isolated using collagenase-containing media. At 24 hours after
seeding 15 000 cells per well onto a 96-well plate, chondrocytes
were treated with media (DMEM/F12 + ITS), PBS, 1:1 lidocaine (2%):PBS,
1:1 bupivacaine (0.5%):PBS, 1:1 lidocaine (2%):HA, 1:1 bupivacaine (0.
5%):HA, or 1:1 HA:PBS for one hour. Following treatment, groups
had conditions removed and 24-hour incubation. Cell viability was
assessed using PrestoBlue and confirmed visually using fluorescence
microscopy. Results. Media-treated groups had a mean of 1.55×10. 4. cells/well
(. sem. 783). All treated cells showed statistically significant reduced
viability when compared with media alone (all p <
0.003). Cells
treated with bupivacaine + HA (6.70×10. 3. cells/well (. sem. 1.10×10. 3. ))
survived significantly more than bupivacaine (2.44×10. 3. cells/well
(. sem . 830)) (p <
0.001). Lidocaine + HA (1.45×10. 3. cells/well
(. sem. 596)) was not significantly more cytotoxic than lidocaine
(2.24×10. 3. cells/well (. sem. 341)) (p = 0.999).
There was no statistical difference between the chondrotoxicities
of PBS (8.49×10. 3. cells/well (. sem. 730) cells/well)
and HA (4.75×10. 3. cells/well (. sem. 886)) (p =
0.294). Conclusions. HA co-administration reduced anaesthetic cytotoxicity with bupivacaine
but not lidocaine, suggesting different mechanisms of injury between
the two. Co-administered
Introduction. Osteoarthritis (OA) is a progressively debilitating disease that
affects mostly cartilage, with associated changes in the bone. The
increasing incidence of OA and an ageing population, coupled with
insufficient therapeutic choices, has led to focus on the potential
of stem cells as a novel strategy for cartilage repair. Methods. In this study, we used scaffold-free mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs)
obtained from bone marrow in an experimental animal model of OA
by direct
This study aimed to examine the effects of SRT1720, a potent SIRT1 activator, on osteoarthritis (OA) progression using an experimental OA model. Osteoarthritis was surgically induced by destabilization of the medial meniscus in eight-week-old C57BL/6 male mice. SRT1720 was administered intraperitoneally twice a week after surgery. Osteoarthritis progression was evaluated histologically using the Osteoarthritis Research Society International (OARSI) score at four, eight, 12 and 16 weeks. The expression of SIRT1, matrix metalloproteinase 13 (MMP-13), a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs-5 (ADAMTS-5), cleaved caspase-3, PARP p85, and acetylated nuclear factor (NF)-κB p65 in cartilage was examined by immunohistochemistry. Synovitis was also evaluated histologically. Primary mouse epiphyseal chondrocytes were treated with SRT1720 in the presence or absence of interleukin 1 beta (IL-1β), and gene expression changes were examined by real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR).Objectives
Methods
Sustained intra-articular delivery of pharmacological agents is an attractive modality but requires use of a safe carrier that would not induce cartilage damage or fibrosis. Collagen scaffolds are widely available and could be used intra-articularly, but no investigation has looked at the safety of collagen scaffolds within synovial joints. The aim of this study was to determine the safety of collagen scaffold implantation in a validated A total of 96 rabbits were randomly and equally assigned to four different groups: arthrotomy alone; arthrotomy and collagen scaffold placement; contracture surgery; and contracture surgery and collagen scaffold placement. Animals were killed in equal numbers at 72 hours, two weeks, eight weeks, and 24 weeks. Joint contracture was measured, and cartilage and synovial samples underwent histological analysis.Objectives
Materials and Methods
Osteoarthritis (OA) is an important cause of
pain, disability and economic loss in humans, and is similarly important in
the horse. Recent knowledge on post-traumatic OA has suggested opportunities
for early intervention, but it is difficult to identify the appropriate
time of these interventions. The horse provides two useful mechanisms
to answer these questions: 1) extensive experience with clinical
OA in horses; and 2) use of a consistently predictable model of
OA that can help study early pathobiological events, define targets
for therapeutic intervention and then test these putative therapies.
This paper summarises the syndromes of clinical OA in horses including
pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment, and details controlled studies
of various treatment options using an equine model of clinical OA.