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Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 11, Issue 8 | Pages 518 - 527
17 Aug 2022
Hu W Lin J Wei J Yang Y Fu K Zhu T Zhu H Zheng X

Aims. To evaluate inducing osteoarthritis (OA) by surgical destabilization of the medial meniscus (DMM) in mice with and without a stereomicroscope. Methods. Based on sample size calculation, 70 male C57BL/6 mice were randomly assigned to three surgery groups: DMM aided by a stereomicroscope; DMM by naked eye; or sham surgery. The group information was blinded to researchers. Mice underwent static weightbearing, von Frey test, and gait analysis at two-week intervals from eight to 16 weeks after surgery. Histological grade of OA was determined with the Osteoarthritis Research Society International (OARSI) scoring system. Results. Surgical DMM with or without stereomicroscope led to decrease in the mean of weightbearing percentages (-20.64% vs -21.44%, p = 0.792) and paw withdrawal response thresholds (-21.35% vs -24.65%, p = 0.327) of the hind limbs. However, the coefficient of variation (CV) of weight-bearing percentages and paw withdrawal response thresholds in naked-eye group were significantly greater than that in the microscope group (19.82% vs 6.94%, p < 0.001; 21.85% vs 9.86%, p < 0.001). The gait analysis showed a similar pattern. Cartilage degeneration was observed in both DMM-surgery groups, evidenced by increased OARSI scores (summed score: 11.23 vs 11.43, p = 0.842), but the microscope group showed less variation in OARSI score than the naked-eye group (CV: 21.03% vs 32.44%; p = 0.032). Conclusion. Although surgical DMM aided by stereomicroscope is technically difficult, it produces a relatively more homogeneous OA model in terms of the discrete degree of pain behaviours and histopathological grading when compared with surgical DMM without stereomicroscope. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2022;11(8):518–527


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 8 - 8
11 Apr 2023
Piet J Vancleef S Mielke F Van Nuffel M Orozco G Korhonen R Lories R Aerts P Van Wassenbergh S Jonkers I
Full Access

Altered mechanical loading is a widely suggested, but poorly understood potential cause of cartilage degeneration in osteoarthritis. In rodents, osteoarthritis is induced following destabilization of the medial meniscus (DMM). This study estimates knee kinematics and contact forces in rats with DMM to gain better insight into the specific mechanisms underlying disease development in this widely-used model. Unilateral knee surgery was performed in adult male Sprague-Dawley rats (n=5 with DMM, n=5 with sham surgery). Radio-opaque beads were implanted on their femur and tibia. 8 weeks following knee surgery, rat gait was recorded using the 3D²YMOX setup (Sanctorum et al. 2019, simultaneous acquisition of biplanar XRay videos and ground reaction forces). 10 trials (1 per rat) were calibrated and processed in XMALab (Knörlein et al. 2016). Hindlimb bony landmarks were labeled on the XRay videos using transfer learning (Deeplabcut, Mathis et al. 2019; Laurence-Chasen et al. 2020). A generic OpenSim musculoskeletal model of the rat hindlimb (Johnson et al. 2008) was adapted to include a 3-degree-of-freedom knee. Inverse kinematics, inverse dynamics, static optimization of muscle forces, and joint reaction analysis were performed. In rats with DMM, knee adduction was lower compared to sham surgery. Ground reaction forces were less variable with DMM, resulting in less variability in joint external moments. The mediolateral ground reaction force was lower, resulting in lower hip adduction moment, thus less force was produced by the rectus femoris. Rats with DMM tended to break rather than propel, resulting in lower hip flexion moment, thus less force was produced by the semimembranosus. These results are consistent with lower knee contact forces in the anteroposterior and axial directions. These preliminary data indicate no overloading of the knee joint in rats with DMM, compared with sham surgery. We are currently expanding our workflow to finite element analysis, to examine mechanical cues in the cartilage of these rats (Fig1G)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 85 - 85
11 Apr 2023
Williamson A Bateman L Kelly D Le Maitre C Aberdein N
Full Access

The effect of high-fat diet and testosterone replacement therapy upon bone remodelling was investigated in orchiectomised male APOE-/- mice. Mice were split in to three groups: sham surgery + placebo treatment (control, n=9), orchiectomy plus placebo treatment (n=8) and orchiectomy plus testosterone treatment (n=10). Treatments were administered via intramuscular injection once a fortnight for 17 weeks before sacrifice at 25 weeks of age. Tibiae were scanned ex-vivo using µCT followed by post-analysis histology and immunohistochemistry. Previously presented µCT data demonstrated orchiectomised, placebo treated mice exhibited significantly reduced trabecular bone volume, number, thickness and BMD compared to control mice despite no significant differences in body weight. Trabecular parameters were rescued back to control levels in orchiectomised mice treated with testosterone. No significant differences were observed in the cortical bone. Assessment of TRAP stained FFPE sections revealed no significant differences in osteoclast or osteoblast number along the endocortical surface. IHC assessment of osteoprotegerin (OPG) expression in osteoblasts is to be quantified alongside markers of osteoclastogenesis including RANK and RANKL. Results support morphological analysis of cortical bone where no change in cortical bone volume or density between groups is in line with no significant change in osteoblast or osteoclast number and percentage across all three groups. Future work will include further IHC assessment of bone remodelling and adiposity, as well as utilisation of mechanical testing to establish the effects of observed morphological differences in bone upon mechanical properties. Additionally, the effects of hormone treatments upon murine-derived bone cells will be investigated to provide mechanistic insights


Little is known on how sensory nerves and osteoclasts affect degenerative processes in subchondral bone in osteoarthritis (OA). Substance P (SP) effects on bone are ambivalent but physiological levels are critical for proper bone quality whereas α-calcitonin gene-related peptide (αCGRP) has anabolic effects. Here, we aimed to analyse the influence of an altered sensory neuropeptide microenvironment on subchondral bone in murine OA. Transection of the medial meniscotibial ligament (DMM) of the right hind leg induced joint instability leading to development of OA. Subchondral bone of tibiae from wildtype (WT), alendronate-treated WT (ALN, osteoclast inhibition), αCGRP- and SP- (Tachykinin (Tac)1) knockout mice was analysed by micro-computed tomography 4 and 12 weeks after DMM or sham surgery. Bone resorption marker CTX-I was measured in serum. We observed osteophytosis in all DMM groups and ALN sham mice 4 weeks after surgery but also in sham groups 12 weeks after surgery. In subchondral bone, bone volume density (BV/TV) increased from 4 to 12 weeks after surgery in DMM WT and Tac1-/− mice. DMM WT mice additionally had increased trabecular numbers (Tb.N.) and decreased trabecular space (Tb.Sp.) over time. Sham mice also showed time-dependent alterations in subchondral bone. In sham WT and αCGRP-/− mice specific bone surface (BS/BV) decreased and trabecular thickness (Tb.Th.) increased from 4 to 12 weeks after surgery while subchondral BV/TV of αCGRP-/− mice increased. Comparison of subchondral bone parameters at each time point showed elevated BV/TV in ALN DMM compared to WT DMM mice 4 weeks after surgery. In addition, both ALN sham and DMM mice showed a reduced BS/BV compared to WT. 4 weeks after sham surgery Tb.Th. was highest in ALN mice. In DMM WT mice Tb.Sp. was higher compared to ALN and αCGRP-/−. 12 weeks after surgery (late OA stage), BS/BV of ALN sham mice was significantly reduced in relation to ALN DMM, WT and Tac1-/− sham, while Tb.Th. increased compared to WT. DMM significantly decreased Tb.N. and increased Tb.Sp. in Tac1-/− compared to sham 12 weeks after surgery. CTX-I concentrations were significantly higher in ALN compared to Tac1-/− mice 4 weeks after sham surgery. 12 weeks after sham surgery CTX-I concentrations of WT mice were increased compared to αCGRP-/− and Tac1-/− mice. Over time, DMM induced stronger changes in subchondral bone of WT mice compared to knockout strains. WT and αCGRP-/− sham mice also show alterations in bone parameters over time indicating age-related effects on bone structure. SP deficiency enhanced DMM-induced structural bone alterations in late stage OA emphasizing the importance of SP under pathophysiological conditions. Osteoclast inhibition with alendronate proved to be preservative for time-dependent changes of subchondral bone observed in both, DMM and sham mice. Interestingly, ALN treatment did not reduce bone turnover marker CTX-I, and additionally promoted early osteophyte formation in sham mice


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 119 - 119
11 Apr 2023
Peffers M Anderson J Jacobsen S Walters M Bundgaard L Hackle M James V
Full Access

Joint tissues release extracellular vesicles (EVs) that potentially sustain joint homeostasis and contribute to osteoarthritis (OA) pathogenesis. EVs are putative novel therapeutics for OA, and transport biologically active molecules (including small non-coding RNAs (SNCRNAs)) between cells. This study identified altering SNCRNA cargo in EVs in OA which may act as early diagnostic markers and treatment targets. OA was surgically induced in four skeletally mature Standardbred horses using an osteochondral fragment model in the left middle carpal joint. The right joint underwent sham surgery. Synovial fluid (SF) and plasma were obtained weekly throughout the 70-day study. EVs were isolated using size exclusion chromatography and characterised using nanoparticle tracking (Nanosight), and exosome fluorescence detection and tetraspanin phenotyping (Exoview). RNA was extracted from EVs derived from SF (sham and OA joints) and plasma collected at days 10, 35, 42, 49, 56, 63, and subjected to small RNA sequencing on a NovaSeq SP100 flow cell (Illumina). Nanosight-derived EV characteristics of size and concentration were not significantly different following disease induction. The diameter of the temporal population of plasma and SF-derived exosomes changed significantly for CD9 and CD81 following OA induction with significant temporal, and disease-related changes in CD63 and CD81 protein expressin in plasma and SF. In SF and plasma-derived EVs snoRNAs, snRNAs, tRNAs, lncRNA, y-RNA, piRNAs and scRNA were found. Following pairwise analysis of all-time points we identified 27 miRs DE in plasma and 45 DE miRs in SF. Seven were DE in plasma and SF; miR-451, miR-25, miR-215, miR-92a, miR-let-7c, miR-486-5p, miR-23a. In plasma and SF 35 and 21 snoRNAs were DE with four DE in plasma and SF; U3, snord15, snord46, snord58. This work has identified alterations to OA EV sncRNAs in plasma and SF providing a greater understanding of the role of EVs in early OA


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 88-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 398 - 398
1 Oct 2006
Ibrahim T Ong S Taylor G
Full Access

Background: The commonest cause of long term failure of total joint arthroplasty is aseptic loosening. As a result, many patients will require complex revision surgery that is not only technically challenging but associated with poorer results. Revisions procedures are also associated with higher morbidity and costs. Aim: To quantify osteolysis in a small animal model of aseptic loosening. This model can then be utilised for screening therapeutic agents to inhibit aseptic loosening. Materials and Methods: 7 time mated female mice were injected with radioactive calcium 45 on day 14 of gestation. The 52 offsprings were divided into 2 equal groups and subjected to either the implantation of clinically relevant ceramic particles or sham surgery into their femora. The non-operated femora were used as control. Animals were killed 4 weeks following surgery. Femora were retrieved, dissolved and radioactivity measured as outcome (CPM/mg = Counts Per Minute per milligram). A Linear mixed effects model was utilised to examine the difference in outcome between the 2 groups. Results: The mean scintillation count for sham surgery was 388 CPM/mg compared to 449 CPM/mg in the control femora. The mean scintillation count for ceramic particles was 351 CPM/mg compared to 420 CPM/mg in the control femora. The mean effect on outcome of surgery with ceramic particles relative to sham surgery was estimated at 16.7 CPM/mg (95CI%: 0.9 to 32.5 CPM/mg; p = 0.025). Conclusion: We have successfully shown that this model can quantify osteolysis. However, the difference detected between sham surgery and ceramic particles was biologically small displaying the inert properties of ceramic. Extending the post surgery interval might show a larger difference between sham surgery and ceramic particles and permit quantitative analysis of therapeutic agents to be screened to inhibit aseptic loosening


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 27 - 27
1 Nov 2021
Williamson A Bateman LE Maitre CL Kelly D Aberdein N
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Introduction and Objective. Global prevalence of obesity has risen almost three-fold between 1975 and 2016. Alongside the more well-known health implications of obesity such as cardiovascular disease, cancer and type II diabetes, is the effect of male obesity on testosterone depletion and hypogonadism. Hypogonadism is a well-known contributor to the acceleration of bone loss during aging, and obesity is the single biggest risk factor for testosterone deficiency in men. Understanding the micro and macro structural changes to bone in response to testosterone depletion in combination with a high fat ‘Western’ diet, will advance our understanding of the relationship between obesity and bone metabolism. This study investigated the impact of surgically induced testosterone depletion and subsequent testosterone treatment upon bone remodelling in mice fed a high fat diet. Materials and Methods. Male ApoE. −/−. mice were split into 3 groups at 7 weeks of age and fed a high fat diet: Sham surgery with placebo treatment, orchiectomy surgery with placebo treatment, and orchiectomy surgery with testosterone treatment. Surgeries were performed at 8 weeks of age, followed by fortnightly testosterone treatment via injection. Mice were sacrificed at 25 weeks of age. Tibiae were collected and scanned ex-vivo at 4.3μm on a SkyScan 1272 Micro-CT scanner (Bruker). Left tibiae were used for assessment of trabecular and cortical Volumes of Interest (VOIs) 0.2mm and 1.0mm respectively from the growth-plate bridge break. Tibiae were subsequently paraffin embedded and sectioned at 4μm prior to immunohistochemical evaluation of alkaline phosphatase. Results. Trabecular bone volume and mineral density were significantly reduced in orchiectomised mice compared to sham-operated controls; and these parameters were normalised to control levels in orchiectomised mice treated with testosterone. In contrast, Trabecular thickness was significantly higher in testosterone depleted animals. Cortical bone parameters and body weights did not significantly differ between groups. Levels of alkaline phosphatase did not differ significantly in cortical or trabecular osteoblasts between groups. Conclusions. Findings suggest that testosterone deficiency significantly reduces trabecular bone parameters, and testosterone therapy may be a useful intervention for the loss of bone mass in testosterone deficient males. These results indicate that testosterone therapy may be useful for the treatment of trabecular bone frailty in testosterone deficient males. Observed changes in trabecular bone do not appear to be due to decreased mineralisation caused by osteoblast alkaline phosphatase. Ongoing work includes histology analysis to elucidate the mechanisms underpinning the changes seen in the bones of testosterone deficient animals


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 88-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 401 - 401
1 Oct 2006
Ibrahim T Ong S Taylor G
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Background: Aseptic loosening of total joint arthroplasty is characterised by osteolysis caused by osteoclasts and macrophages. Osteolysis occurs by acidification and dissolution of hydroxyapatite crystals then proteolysis of the bone collagen matrix. N-Telopeptide (NTx) and deoxypyridinolone (DPD) represent highly specific markers for bone resorption. Aim: To investigate whether urinary NTx and DPD generated in-vivo can be used as bone markers in a small animal model of wear debris induced osteolysis. Materials and Methods: 41 and 38 urinary samples were collected from mice at autopsy four weeks following either the implantation of clinically relevant ceramic particles or sham surgery into their femora and assayed for NTx and DPD respectively. Bone markers were corrected for urinary creatinine. Results: The mean urinary NTx concentration for mice that underwent the implantation of clinically relevant ceramic particles was 95.0 nM BCE/mM creatinine compared to 85.3 nM BCE/mM creatinine for mice who had sham surgery (p = 0.8, 95%CI: −29.0 to 30.7). The mean urinary DPD concentration for mice that underwent the implantation of clinically relevant ceramic particles was 5.3 nM DPD/mM creatinine compared to 4.0 nM DPD/ mM creatinine for mice who had sham surgery (p = 0.07, 95%CI: −2.8 to 1.4). Conclusion: The absolute values of NTx and DPD increased in mice that underwent the implantation of clinically relevant ceramic particles compared to sham surgery even though this was not statistically significant. Extending the post operative interval might allow both NTx and DPD to be utilised as bone markers of osteolysis in our small animal model of aseptic loosening


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 3, Issue 5 | Pages 161 - 168
1 May 2014
Mundi R Chaudhry H Mundi S Godin K Bhandari M

High-quality randomised controlled trials (RCTs) evaluating surgical therapies are fundamental to the delivery of evidence-based orthopaedics. Orthopaedic clinical trials have unique challenges; however, when these challenges are overcome, evidence from trials can be definitive in its impact on surgical practice. In this review, we highlight several issues that pose potential challenges to orthopaedic investigators aiming to perform surgical randomised controlled trials. We begin with a discussion on trial design issues, including the ethics of sham surgery, the importance of sample size, the need for patient-important outcomes, and overcoming expertise bias. We then explore features surrounding the execution of surgical randomised trials, including ethics review boards, the importance of organisational frameworks, and obtaining adequate funding. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2014;3:161–8


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 3, Issue 1 | Pages 17 - 20
1 Feb 2014

The February 2014 Knee Roundup. 360 . looks at: whether sham surgery is as good as arthroscopic meniscectomy; distraction in knee osteoarthritis; whether trans-tibial tunnel placement increases the risk of graft failure in ACL surgery; whether joint replacements prevent cardiac events; the size of the pulmonary embolism problem; tranexamic acid and knee replacement haemostasis; matching the demand for knee replacement and follow-up; predicting the length of stay after knee replacement; and popliteal artery injury in TKR


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 3, Issue 1 | Pages 46 - 46
1 Feb 2014

The February 2014 Research Roundup. 360 . looks at: blood supply to the femoral head after dislocation; diabetes and hip replacement; bone remodelling over two decades following hip replacement; sham surgery as good as arthroscopic meniscectomy; distraction in knee osteoarthritis; whether joint replacement prevent cardiac events; tranexamic acid and knee replacement haemostasis; cartilage colonisation in bipolar ankle grafts; CTs and proof of fusion; atorvastatin for muscle re-innervation after sciatic nerve transection; microfracture and short-term pain in cuff repair; promising early results from L-PRF augmented cuff repairs; and fatty degeneration in a rodent model


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 50 - 50
1 Nov 2018
O'Sullivan L Allison H Schiavi J Spanoudes K Parle E McNamara L
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Although osteoporosis reduces overall bone mass causing bone fragility, our recent studies have shown that bone tissue composition is altered at the microscopic level, which is undetectable by conventional diagnostic techniques (DEXA) but may contribute to bone fracture. However, the time sequence of changes in bone microarchitecture, mechanical environment and mineral distribution are not yet fully understood. This study quantified the longitudinal effects of estrogen deficiency on the trabecular microarchitecture and mineral distribution in the tibia of Female Wistar rats (6 months) that underwent ovariectomy (OVX, n=10) or sham surgery (SHAM, n=10). Weekly micro-CT scans of the proximal tibia were conducted at 15µm resolution for the first month of estrogen deficiency. Morphometric analysis was conducted to characterise the trabecular bone microarchitecture. The bone mineral composition was characterised with analysis of bone mineral density distributions (BMDD). There was significantly reduced trabecular bone volume fraction at 2 weeks in OVX rats compared to controls (p<0.01). There was no difference in mineral distribution between the OVX and control animals. This study provides the first evidence in uncovering the temporal nature of changes in bone microarchitecture and mineral distribution, showing that structure changes before composition. In-vivo µCT analysis for later time points (week 8, 14 and 34) is ongoing to comprehensively examine these longitudinal compositional changes. Moreover, we are conducting ex-vivo mechanical analysis (nanoindentation), and together these will uncover the time-sequence and respective contribution of changes in bone mass and composition to the integrity of the bone tissue at these stages of estrogen deficiency


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 13, Issue 4 | Pages 169 - 183
15 Apr 2024
Gil-Melgosa L Llombart-Blanco R Extramiana L Lacave I Abizanda G Miranda E Agirre X Prósper F Pineda-Lucena A Pons-Villanueva J Pérez-Ruiz A

Aims

Rotator cuff (RC) injuries are characterized by tendon rupture, muscle atrophy, retraction, and fatty infiltration, which increase injury severity and jeopardize adequate tendon repair. Epigenetic drugs, such as histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACis), possess the capacity to redefine the molecular signature of cells, and they may have the potential to inhibit the transformation of the fibro-adipogenic progenitors (FAPs) within the skeletal muscle into adipocyte-like cells, concurrently enhancing the myogenic potential of the satellite cells.

Methods

HDACis were added to FAPs and satellite cell cultures isolated from mice. The HDACi vorinostat was additionally administered into a RC injury animal model. Histological analysis was carried out on the isolated supra- and infraspinatus muscles to assess vorinostat anti-muscle degeneration potential.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 117 - 117
1 Jan 2017
Suzuki M Miyakoshi N Kasukawa Y Nozaka K Tsuchie H Fujii M Sato C Masutani N Kawano T Shimada Y
Full Access

The superior analgesic effects of minodronate compared with other bisphosphonates has been previously reported. However, to our knowledge, there are no studies analyzing the analgesic effects of bisphosphonates on chronic pain. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the analgesic effects of minodronate (MIN), alendronate (ALN), and pregabalin (PRG) on chronic pain caused by chronic constriction injury (CCI) of the sciatic nerve. Four-week-old female Wister rats underwent ovariectomy. At 8 weeks old, the left sciatic nerve was ligated to induce the chronic pain model (CCI side), and sham surgery was performed on the right posterior limb as a CCI control (control side). The rats were divided into the following four groups: 1) MIN group, administered with minodronate (0.15 mg/kg/week) (n = 10); 2) ALN group, administered with alendronate (0.15 mg/kg/week) (n = 10); 3) PRG group, administered with pregabalin (10 mg/kg) (n = 9); and 4) Control group, administered with vehicle (n = 10). Treatments were administered subcutaneously every week for 2 weeks immediately after CCI. To quantify the sensitivity to a tactile stimulus, paw withdrawal in response to a tactile stimulus was measured using von Frey filaments at 0, 1, and 2 weeks after CCI. Von Frey filaments were applied to the plantar surface of the hindpaws for 3 s, and this was repeated three times. Paw withdrawal in response to the stimulus was evaluated by scoring as follows: 0, no response; 1, a slow and/ or slight response to the stimulus; 2, a quick withdrawal response; 3, an intense withdrawal response away from the stimulus. The mean value of the score was adopted as the pain score. After evaluating the response, bilateral femurs were harvested for bone mineral density (BMD) measurements. The pain score of the CCI side was significantly higher than that of the sham side in all groups (p < 0.05) at each time point. The pain score for the MIN group, but not the ALN group, of the CCI side was significantly lower (p = 0.05) at 0 and 1 week after CCI. Total femoral BMD of the CCI side was significantly lower in the PRG and Control groups than those of the MIN and ALN groups (p < 0.05). No significant difference was identified for BMD between the MIN and ALN groups. Minodronate showed a significant analgesic effect on chronic pain and suppressed osteoporotic changes caused by CCI


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 115 - 115
1 Jul 2020
Jhirad A Wohl G
Full Access

In osteoporosis treatment, current interventions, including pharmaceutical treatments and exercise protocols, suffer from challenges of guaranteed efficacy for patients and poor patient compliance. Moreover, bone loss continues to be a complicating factor for conditions such as spinal cord injury, prescribed bed-rest, and space flight. A low-cost treatment modality could improve patient compliance. Electrical stimulation has been shown to improve bone mass in animal models of disuse, but there have been no studies of the effects of electrical stimulation on bone in the context of bone loss under hormone deficiency such as in post-menopausal osteoporosis. The purpose of this study was to explore the effects of electrical stimulation on changes in bone mass in the ovariectomized rat model of post-menopausal osteoporosis. All animal protocols were approved by the institutional Animal Research Ethics Board. We developed a custom electrical stimulation device capable of delivering a constant current, 15 Hz sinusoidal signal. We used 30 female Sprague Dawley rats (12–13 weeks old). Half (n=15) were ovariectomized (OVX), and half (n=15) underwent sham OVX surgery (SHAM). Three of each OVX and SHAM animals were sacrificed at baseline. The remaining 24 rats were separated into four equal groups (n=6 per group): OVX electrical stimulation (OVX-stim), OVX no stimulation (OVX-no stim), SHAM electrical stimulation (SHAM-stim), and SHAM no stimulation (SHAM-no stim). While anaesthetized, stimulation groups received transdermal electrical stimulation to the right knee through bilateral skin-mounted electrodes (10 × 10 mm) with electrode gel. The left knee served as a non-stimulated contralateral control. The no-stimulation groups had electrodes placed on the right knee, but not connected. Rats underwent the stim/no-stim procedure for one hour per day for six weeks. Rats were sacrificed (CO2) after six weeks. Femurs and tibias were scanned by microCT focussed on the proximal tibia and distal femur. MicroCT data were analyzed for trabecular bone measures of bone volume fraction (BV/TV), thickness (Tb.Th), and anisotropy, and cortical bone cross-sectional area and second moment of area. Femurs and tibias from OVX rats had significantly less trabecular bone than SHAM (femur BV/TV = −74.1%, tibia BV/TV = −77.6%). In the distal femur of OVX-stim rats, BV/TV was significantly greater in the stimulated right (11.4%, p < 0 .05) than the non-stimulated contralateral (left). BV/TV in the OVX-stim right femur also tended to be greater than that in the OVX-no-stim right femur, but the difference was not significant (17.7%, p=0.22). There were no differences between stim and no-stim groups for tibial trabecular measures, or cortical bone measures in either the femur or the tibia. This study presents novel findings that electrical stimulation can partially mitigate bone loss in the OVX rat femur, a model of human post-menopausal bone loss. Further work is needed to explore why there was a differential response of the tibial and femoral bone, and to better understand how bone cells respond to electrical stimulation. The long-term goal of this work is to determine if electrical stimulation could be used as a complementary modality for preventing post-menopausal bone loss


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 12, Issue 4 | Pages 274 - 284
11 Apr 2023
Du X Jiang Z Fang G Liu R Wen X Wu Y Hu S Zhang Z

Aims

This study aimed to investigate the role and mechanism of meniscal cell lysate (MCL) in fibroblast-like synoviocytes (FLSs) and osteoarthritis (OA).

Methods

Meniscus and synovial tissue were collected from 14 patients with and without OA. MCL and FLS proteins were extracted and analyzed by liquid chromatography‒mass spectrometry (LC‒MS). The roles of MCL and adenine nucleotide translocase 3 (ANT3) in FLSs were examined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), flow cytometry, immunofluorescence, and transmission electron microscopy. Histological analysis was performed to determine ANT3 expression levels in a male mouse model.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 12, Issue 11 | Pages 677 - 690
1 Nov 2023
Wang X Jiang W Pan K Tao L Zhu Y

Aims

Currently, the effect of drug treatment for osteoporosis is relatively poor, and the side effects are numerous and serious. Melatonin is a potential drug to improve bone mass in postmenopausal women. Unfortunately, the mechanism by which melatonin improves bone metabolism remains unclear. The aim of this study was to further investigate the potential mechanism of melatonin in the treatment of osteoporosis.

Methods

The effects of melatonin on mitochondrial apoptosis protein, bmal1 gene, and related pathway proteins of RAW264.7 (mouse mononuclear macrophage leukaemia cells) were analyzed by western blot. Cell Counting Kit-8 was used to evaluate the effect of melatonin on cell viability. Flow cytometry was used to evaluate the effect of melatonin on the apoptosis of RAW264.7 cells and mitochondrial membrane potential. A reactive oxygen species (ROS) detection kit was used to evaluate the level of ROS in osteoclast precursors. We used bmal1-small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) to downregulate the Bmal1 gene. We established a postmenopausal mouse model and verified the effect of melatonin on the bone mass of postmenopausal osteoporosis in mice via micro-CT. Bmal1 lentiviral activation particles were used to establish an in vitro model of overexpression of the bmal1 gene.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 12, Issue 4 | Pages 259 - 273
6 Apr 2023
Lu R Wang Y Qu Y Wang S Peng C You H Zhu W Chen A

Aims

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a prevalent joint disorder with inflammatory response and cartilage deterioration as its main features. Dihydrocaffeic acid (DHCA), a bioactive component extracted from natural plant (gynura bicolor), has demonstrated anti-inflammatory properties in various diseases. We aimed to explore the chondroprotective effect of DHCA on OA and its potential mechanism.

Methods

In vitro, interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β) was used to establish the mice OA chondrocytes. Cell counting kit-8 evaluated chondrocyte viability. Western blotting analyzed the expression levels of collagen II, aggrecan, SOX9, inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), IL-6, matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs: MMP1, MMP3, and MMP13), and signalling molecules associated with nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) and mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways. Immunofluorescence analysis assessed the expression of aggrecan, collagen II, MMP13, and p-P65. In vivo, a destabilized medial meniscus (DMM) surgery was used to induce mice OA knee joints. After injection of DHCA or a vehicle into the injured joints, histological staining gauged the severity of cartilage damage.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 11, Issue 4 | Pages 189 - 199
13 Apr 2022
Yang Y Li Y Pan Q Bai S Wang H Pan X Ling K Li G

Aims

Treatment for delayed wound healing resulting from peripheral vascular diseases and diabetic foot ulcers remains a challenge. A novel surgical technique named ‘tibial cortex transverse transport’ (TTT) has been developed for treating peripheral ischaemia, with encouraging clinical effects. However, its underlying mechanisms remain unclear. In the present study, we explored the potential biological mechanisms of TTT surgery using various techniques in a rat TTT animal model.

Methods

A novel rat model of TTT was established with a designed external fixator, and effects on wound healing were investigated. Laser speckle perfusion imaging, vessel perfusion, histology, and immunohistochemistry were used to evaluate the wound healing processes.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 11, Issue 3 | Pages 162 - 170
14 Mar 2022
Samvelyan HJ Huesa C Cui L Farquharson C Staines KA

Aims

Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most prevalent systemic musculoskeletal disorder, characterized by articular cartilage degeneration and subchondral bone (SCB) sclerosis. Here, we sought to examine the contribution of accelerated growth to OA development using a murine model of excessive longitudinal growth. Suppressor of cytokine signalling 2 (SOCS2) is a negative regulator of growth hormone (GH) signalling, thus mice deficient in SOCS2 (Socs2-/-) display accelerated bone growth.

Methods

We examined vulnerability of Socs2-/- mice to OA following surgical induction of disease (destabilization of the medial meniscus (DMM)), and with ageing, by histology and micro-CT.