Aims. To examine how eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A (eIF5A) regulates osteoarthritis (OA) during
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a highly prevalent and disabling disease with an unmet therapeutic need. The characteristic cartilage loss and alteration of other joint structures result from a complex interaction of multiple risk factors, with
Aims. Excessive chondrocyte hypertrophy is a common feature in cartilage degeneration which is susceptible to joint overloading, but the relationship between
As high incidences of tendinopathies are observed particularly in those who intensively use their tendons, we assume that pathological changes are caused, at least partially, by
Tendinopathy is the most frequent musculoskeletal disease that requires medical attention.
Tendinopathy is one of the most common orthopaedic pathological conditions characterized by tendon degenerative changes. Excessive mechanical loading is considered as a major causative factor in the development of tendinopathy, but the mechanisms of pathogenesis remain unclear. High mobility group box-1 (HMGB1), a potent inflammatory mediator when released into the matrix, has been identified in the early stage tendinopathy patients. Since the release and contribution of HMGB1 in tendinopathy development due to
Abstract. OBJECTIVE. Knee varus malalignment increases medial knee compartment loading and is associated with knee osteoarthritis (OA) progression and severity. 1. Altered biomechanical loading and dysregulation of joint tissue biology drive OA progression, but mechanistic links between these factors are lacking. Subchondral bone structural changes are biomechanically driven, involve bone resorption, immune cell influx, angiogenesis, and sensory nerve invasion, and contribute to joint destruction and pain. 2. We have investigated mechanisms underlying this involving RANKL and alkaline phosphatase (ALP), which reflect bone resorption and mineralisation respectively. 3. and the axonal guidance factor Sema3A. Sema3A is osteotropic, expressed by mechanically sensitive osteocytes, and an inhibitor of sensory nerve, blood vessel and immune cell invasion. 4. Sema3A is also differentially expressed in human OA bone. 5. HYPOTHESIS: Medial knee compartment overloading in varus knee malalignment patients causes dysregulation of bone derived Sema3A signalling directly linking joint biomechanics to pathology and pain. METHODS. Synovial fluid obtained from 30 subjects with medial knee OA (KL grade II-IV) undergoing high tibial osteotomy surgery (HTO) was analysed by mesoscale discovery and ELISA analysis for inflammatory, neural and bone turnover markers. 11 of these patients had been previously analysed in a published patient-specific musculoskeletal model. 6. of gait estimating joint contact location, pressure, forces, and medial-lateral condyle load distribution in a published data set included in analyses. Data analysis was performed using Pearson's correlation matrices and principal component analyses. Principal Components (PCs) with eigenvalues greater than 1 were analysed. RESULTS. PC1 (32.94% of variation) and PC2 (25.79% of variation) from PCA analysis and correlation matrices separated patients according to correlated clusters of established inflammatory markers of OA pain and progression (IL6/IL8, r=0.754, p<0.001) and anti-inflammatory mediators (IL4/IL10, r=0.469, p=0.005). Bone turnover marker ALP was positively associated with KL grade (r=0.815, p=0.002) and negatively associated with IL10 (r=−0.402, p=0.018) and first peak knee loading pressures (r=−0.688, p=0.019). RANKL was positively associated with IL4 (r=0.489, p=0.003). Synovial fluid Sema3A concentrations showed separate clustering from all OA progression markers and was inversely correlated with TNF-α (r=−0.423, p=0.022) in HTO patients. Sema3A was significantly inversely correlated with total predicted force in the medial joint compartment (r=−0.621, p=0.041), mean (r=−0.63, p=0.038) and maximum (r=−0.613, p=0.045) calculated medial compartment joint pressures during the first phase and mean (r=−0.618, p=0.043) and maximum (r=−0.641, p=0.034) medial compartment joint pressures during midstance outputs of patient-specific musculoskeletal model. CONCLUSIONS. This study shows joint inflammatory status and
Varus malalignment increases the susceptibility of cartilage to
Introduction and Objective. Chronic tendinopathy is a multifactorial disease and a common problem in both, athletes and the general population.
Intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD) is a major cause of low back pain, which affects 80% of the adult population at least once in their life. The pathophysiological conditions underlying IDD are still poorly understood. Genetic makeup, aging, smoking, physical inactivity and
Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common joint disease, which is characterized by a progressive loss of proteoglycans and the destruction of extracellular matrix (ECM), leading to a loss of cartilage integrity and joint function. During OA development, chondrocytes alter ECM synthesis and change their gene expression profile including upregulation of hypertrophic markers known from the growth plate. Although physiological mechanical loading can support cartilage formation and maintenance,
Purpose of study and background.
INTRODUCTION.
Femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) causes pain
and chondrolabral damage via
1. The cause of cyst formation lies in the major overloading of certain regions caused by the unevenness of the articular surface produced by the arthritic process. 2. Photoelasticity investigations disclose an overburdening of the bone beneath the surface of the joint, which in turn markedly resembles the shapes of actual cysts. 3. The results of this investigation fit organically into the logical sequence of processes in accordance with our theory. 4. This theory is further borne out by the successful formation of cyst phenomena in healthy joints by overloading (Trias 1961). 5. Our theory has no immediate practical bearing on the treatment of arthritic cysts. However, it uncovers certain interesting aspects of the behaviour of bone tissues under
The cause of elbow tendinosis is most likely a combination of
Summary Statement. An organ culture experiment was simulated to explore the mechanisms that can link cell death to
The October 2024 Knee Roundup360 looks at: Managing the unexpected: treatment of intraoperative medial collateral ligament injuries; Identifying subgroups of patients that may benefit from robotic arm-assisted total knee arthroplasty: secondary analysis of data from a randomized controlled trial; Cost-effectiveness of enoxaparin versus aspirin in the prevention of venous thromboembolism after total hip or knee arthroplasty: an analysis from the CRISTAL cluster-randomized trial; Cartilage regeneration and long-term survival in medial knee osteoarthritis patients treated with high tibial osteotomy and osteochondral autologous transfer system; Treatment of chronic and complex meniscal tears with arthroscopic meniscus repair augmented with collagen matrix wrapping: failure rate and functional outcomes; Long-term outcomes of multiligament knee injuries in American football players.
Approximately 10% to 20% of knee arthroplasty patients are not satisfied with the result, while a clear indication for revision surgery might not be present. Therapeutic options for these patients, who often lack adequate quadriceps strength, are limited. Therefore, the primary aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical effect of a novel rehabilitation protocol that combines low-load resistance training (LL-RT) with blood flow restriction (BFR). Between May 2022 and March 2024, we enrolled 45 dissatisfied knee arthroplasty patients who lacked any clear indication for revision to this prospective cohort study. All patients were at least six months post-surgery and had undergone conventional physiotherapy previously. The patients participated in a supervised LL-RT combined with BFR in 18 sessions. Primary assessments included the following patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs): Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS); Knee Society Score: satisfaction (KSSs); the EuroQol five-dimension five-level questionnaire (EQ-5D-5L); and the pain catastrophizing scale (PCS). Functionality was assessed using the six-minute walk Test (6MWT) and the 30-second chair stand test (30CST). Follow-up timepoints were at baseline, six weeks, three months, and six months after the start.Aims
Methods
In this study, we aimed to evaluate incidence trends and potential risk factors associated with Perthes’ disease in Denmark, using publicly available data. Our population-based case-control study used data from the Danish National Patient Register and Danish Civil Registration System, accessed through the publicly available Danish Biobank Register, to identify 1,924,292 infants born between 1985 and 2016. We estimated age-specific incidence rates for four birth periods of equal duration (1985 to 1992, 1993 to 2000, 2001 to 2008, and 2009 to 2016) and investigated associations with perinatal conditions, congenital malformations, coagulation defects, autism spectrum disorders (ASD), and attention deficit hyperactivity disorders (ADHD).Aims
Methods