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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 18 - 18
1 Aug 2012
Li S Chen J Caterson B Hughes C
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Introduction. Kashin-Beck disease (KBD) is an endemic degenerative osteoarthropathy affecting approximately 3 million people in China (Stone R, 2009). The precise aetiology of KBD is not clear, but the lack of selenium and the pollution of mycotoxins in food are a suspected cause of KBD. In this pilot study, we use a rat model to investigate the effect of low selenium and T-2 toxin on articular cartilage metabolism. Methods. 140 male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed with selenium-deficient or normal diet for 4 weeks to produce a low selenium or normal nutrition status. The rats were then fed for a further 4 weeks with low selenium or normal diets with or without T-2 toxin (100ng per gram body weight per day). The rat knee joints were fixed and paraffin embedded and histological and immunohistochemical staining was performed to analyse the metabolism of articular cartilage. Results. There was increased cell cluster formation in the middle and/or deep zones in rats fed with both diets. However, an apparent cell loss was observed in the low selenium + T-2 toxin group with an apparent increase in caspase-3 staining, indicating the increased cell apoptosis. Moreover, toluidine blue staining was reduced in the low selenium + T-2 toxin group, suggesting a loss of sulphated glycosaminoglycans. Similarly, there was reduced 2B6 and 6C3 staining in the territorial matrix of chondrocytes, indicating a reduced synthesis in 4-sulhated and native CS motifs. In contrast, increased 1B5 staining was observed in the articular cartilage from the low selenium + T-2 toxin group, suggesting a lack of CS sulphatransferase activity. Interestingly, there was increased 7D4 staining in the superficial zone of articular cartilage from low selenium + T-2 toxin group, suggesting an initiation of an osteoarthritis-like lesion. Discussion. These results indicated that low selenium nutrition and T-2 toxin could promote cell apoptosis and disrupt CS-GAG metabolism in ECM of rat articular cartilage in this animal model, which is similar to that observed in KBD patients. Collectively, our results support the hypothesis that low selenium and T-2 toxin are the cause of KBD


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.