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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Triamcinolone hexacetonide protects against fibrillation and osteophyte formation following chemically induced articular cartilage damage

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TLDR
Triamcinolone hexacetonide produced a marked, dose-dependent protective effect in this model of chemically induced articular cartilage damage.
Abstract
Although corticosteroids have been shown to cause articular cartilage degeneration, recent studies of experimentally induced osteoarthritis indicate that under certain conditions they may protect against cartilage damage and osteophyte formation. The present study examines the in vivo effect of triamcinolone hexacetonide on the degeneration of articular cartilage which occurs following intraarticular injection of sodium iodoacetate. Three weeks after a single injection of iodoacetate into the knees of guinea pigs, ipsilateral femoral condylar cartilage exhibited fibrillation, loss of staining with Safranin O, depletion of chondrocytes, and prominent osteophytes. In striking contrast, when triamcinolone hexacetonide was injected into the ipsilateral knee 24 hours after the intraarticular injection of iodoacetate, fibrillation was noted in only 1 of 6 samples, osteophytes were much less prominent, pericellular staining with Safranin O persisted, and cell loss was less extensive. Knees of animals which received only one-tenth as much intraarticular triamcinolone hexacetonide after the iodoacetate injection also exhibited marked reduction in size and extent of osteophytes. However, the degree of fibrillation, loss of Safranin O staining, and chondrocyte depletion was similar to that observed in animals injected with iodoacetate but not treated with intraarticular steroid. No apparent morphologic or histochemical changes were observed after intraarticular injection of the steroid preparation alone. Thus, triamcinolone hexacetonide produced a marked, dose-dependent protective effect in this model of chemically induced articular cartilage damage.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The OARSI histopathology initiative – recommendations for histological assessments of osteoarthritis in the mouse

TL;DR: A semi-quantitative scoring system that can be applied universally to instability, enzymatic, transgenic and spontaneous OA models may be a useful tool for both new and experienced scorers to sensitively evaluate models and OA mechanisms, and also provide a common paradigm for comparative evaluation across the many groups performing these analyses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Intra-articular Triamcinolone vs Saline on Knee Cartilage Volume and Pain in Patients With Knee Osteoarthritis: A Randomized Clinical Trial.

TL;DR: 2 years of intra-articular triamcinolone, compared with intra-artsicular saline, resulted in significantly greater cartilage volume loss and no significant difference in knee pain, and these findings do not support this treatment for patients with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Safety and efficacy of long-term intraarticular steroid injections in osteoarthritis of the knee: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

TL;DR: The findings support the long-term safety and efficacy of IA steroid injections for patients with symptomatic knee OA with repeated steroid injections, which appears to be clinically effective for the relief of symptoms of the disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Weight bearing as a measure of disease progression and efficacy of anti-inflammatory compounds in a model of monosodium iodoacetate-induced osteoarthritis

TL;DR: The determination of differences in hind paw weight distribution in the rat MIA model of OA is a technically straightforward, reproducible method that is predictive of the effects of anti-inflammatory and analgesic agents and useful for the discovery of novel pharmacologic agents in human OA.
Journal Article

Animal models of osteoarthritis.

TL;DR: Animal models of osteoarthritis are used to study the pathogenesis of cartilage degeneration and to evaluate potential antiarthritic drugs for clinical use and there are no agents that have been proven to provide anything other than symptomatic relief in human OA.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Individual Comparisons by Ranking Methods

TL;DR: The comparison of two treatments generally falls into one of the following two categories: (a) a number of replications for each of the two treatments, which are unpaired, or (b) we may have a series of paired comparisons, some of which may be positive and some negative as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anti-inflammatory steroids induce biosynthesis of a phospholipase A2 inhibitor which prevents prostaglandin generation.

R J Flower, +1 more
- 29 Mar 1979 - 
TL;DR: It is shown that similar events occur in the guinea pig perfused lung before inhibition by steroids of phospholipase A2 activity (and thus TXA2 generation), and a steroid-induced factor is discovered which mimics the anti-phospholipases effects of these anti-inflammatory agents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical Basis for the Histological Use of Safranin O in the Study of Articular Cartilage

TL;DR: Information, previously unavailable for the interaction of safranin O with chondroitin sulphate or keratan sulphate in solution is found.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intra-articular corticosteroids. An updated assessment.

TL;DR: Clinical experience suggests that intra-articular steroids often ameliorate acute exacerbations of knee osteoarthritis associated with significant effusions, symptomatic involvement of interphalangeal and other nonweight-bearing articulations, synovial cysts, and lumbar facet arthropathy.
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