Early OA Following Synovial Joint Fracture

2021 ◽  
pp. 103-119
Author(s):  
Don Anderson ◽  
James Martin ◽  
J. Lawrence Marsh ◽  
Jessica Goetz ◽  
Mitchell Coleman ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
pp. 4-8
Author(s):  
Tadej Glažar ◽  
Marjeta Zupancic ◽  
Samo Kralj ◽  
Robert Peternelj

The Real Estate Fund of Pension and Disability Insurance (Nepremicninski Sklad) in Slovenia, founded in1997 is the owner of 3255 properties in 116 locations throughout the country and is intended for solving housing issues of pensioners of 65 years or older and other elderly persons who are allowed independently to live. The lease contracts are concluded for an indefinite period of time. The aim and vision of the Fund is to improve the quality of life for the elderly tenants by adapting the living environment, the flats and surroundings according to the physical needs of aging tenants. Homes for seniors often have low light levels and poor light spectrum caused by fluorescent or incandescent lighting. Demographic changes in most European countries show rising average life expectancy which means that the number of people with weak visual capacity or visual impairment is increasing. Equally the risks of injuries due to poor lighting conditions are increasing, e.g. missing a step resulting in a hip joint fracture. Better lighting conditions are of critical importance for aging population, as stated also in the recently published CIE227:2017. To facilitate safe environment for the elderly, the Fund in 2013 initiated a lighting research study that should provide facts and evidence for a lighting standard for their own premises.


Biomedicines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 902
Author(s):  
Susanne N. Wijesinghe ◽  
Mark A. Lindsay ◽  
Simon W. Jones

Osteoarthritis (OA) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are two of the most common chronic inflammatory joint diseases, for which there remains a great clinical need to develop safer and more efficacious pharmacological treatments. The pathology of both OA and RA involves multiple tissues within the joint, including the synovial joint lining and the bone, as well as the articular cartilage in OA. In this review, we discuss the potential for the development of oligonucleotide therapies for these disorders by examining the evidence that oligonucleotides can modulate the key cellular pathways that drive the pathology of the inflammatory diseased joint pathology, as well as evidence in preclinical in vivo models that oligonucleotides can modify disease progression.


2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 765.2-765
Author(s):  
C. Guillén-Astete ◽  
P. Zurita-Prada ◽  
C. Urrego-Laurín

Background:Synovial inflammation is part of the pathophysiological process of PsoA although it is considered secondary to enthesitis. It is of interest to assess the synovial joint, peritendinous and enthesic response of patients with PsoA in remission under controlled mechanical stress.Objectives:Our aim is to present our observational experience in patients with APso in remission or low activity of the disease exposed to controlled manual physical efforts adapted to the own grasping capacity of each subject.Methods:Before-after study of a consecutive cohort of patients with PsoA (CASPAR criteria), of at least two years d evolution and DAPSA≤14 at present. Patients with positive rheumatoid factor, patients with exclusively axial forms and patients on biological therapy at the beginning of the study were excluded. All patients underwent controlled basal ultrasound and post-dynamometric exercise (CAMRY EH101-17) of the dominant hand which included the carpus, MCFs, IFPs and IFDs of the 2nd to 5th fingers. The ultrasound findings were scored according to EULAR recommendations in grey scale (GS) and power Doppler (PD) for synovitis, enthesitis and tenosynovitis (maximum scores 71 and 87, respectively). For statistical analysis, comparisons were made with the results of their baseline and post-exercise ultrasound scores between subjects diagnosed with PsoA and controls. The Student’s T test was used for related and unrelated data according to correspondence.Results:Nineteen patients and controls were included, of which 73.7% were male. Mean age: 42.2 SD 6.6 and 42.21 SD 8.28, respectively. Basal DAPSA among patients: 7.26 SD 4.53. Mean traction strength of patients and controls: 23.8 SD 7.3 and 26.1 SD 6.9 kg, respectively (P=0.336). In the group of patients, the post exercise DAPSA had a mean of 7.52 SD 4.62 (P=0.021, with respect to the basal DAPSA). The mean total GS score in the patient group was 3.94 SD 2.36 and 7.31 SD 3.3, pre- and post-exercise, respectively (P<0.001). The mean total score in the PD study was 0.73 SD 0.73 and 2.57 SD 1.16, respectively (P<0.001). In patients with PsoA there were no detectable enthesic changes. In the control group, no ultrasound changes were statistically significant, although the score for tenosynovitis ranged from 0.1 SD 0.31 to 0.42 SD 0.6 (P=0.055).Conclusion:Patients with APso in clinical remission or low disease activity develop ultrasound changes after controlled exercise. These changes are appreciable in the joint synovium and tendon but not at an enthesic level. Although these changes are also detectable in a healthy population, their prevalence is much lower. Our interpretation is that control of the disease correlates with an absence of enthesic inflammatory activity although synovial susceptibility remains less evident. This reinforces the idea that PsoA is an inflammatory enthesitis with associated arthritis and not its opposite.Disclosure of Interests:None declared


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (12) ◽  
pp. 6461
Author(s):  
Marko Ostojic ◽  
Ante Zevrnja ◽  
Katarina Vukojevic ◽  
Violeta Soljic

Synovitis of the knee synovium is proven to be a precursor of knee osteoarthritis (OA), leading to a radiologically advanced stage of the disease. This study was conducted to elucidate the expression pattern of different inflammatory factors—NF-kB, iNOS, and MMP-9 in a subpopulation of synovial cells. Thirty synovial membrane intra-operative biopsies of patients (ten controls, ten with early OA, and ten with advanced OA, according to the Kellgren–Lawrence radiological score) were immunohistochemically stained for NF-kB, iNOS, and MMP9, and for different cell markers for macrophages, fibroblasts, leukocytes, lymphocytes, blood vessel endothelial cells, and blood vessel smooth muscle cells. The total number of CD68+/NF-kB+ cells/mm2 in the intima of early OA patients (median = 2359) was significantly higher compared to the total number of vimentin+/Nf-kB+ cells/mm2 (median = 1321) and LCA+/NF-kB+ cells/mm2 (median = 64) (p < 0.001 and p < 0.0001, respectively). The total number of LCA+/NF-kB+ cells/mm2 in the subintima of advanced OA patients (median = 2123) was significantly higher compared to the total number of vimentin+/NF-kB+ cells/mm2 (median = 14) and CD68+/NF-kB+ cells/mm2 (median = 29) (p < 0.0001). The total number of CD68+/iNOS+ cells/mm2 in the intima of both early and advanced OA patients was significantly higher compared to the total number of vimentin+/iNOS+ cells/mm2 and LCA+/iNOS+ cells/mm2 (p < 0.0001 and p < 0.001, respectively). The total number of CD68+/MMP-9+ cells/mm2 in the intima of both early and advanced OA patients was significantly higher compared to the total number of vimentin+/MMP-9+ cells/mm2 and CD5+/MMP-9+ cells/mm2 (p < 0.0001). Macrophages may have a leading role in OA progression through the NF-kB production of inflammatory factors (iNOS and MMP-9) in the intima, except in advanced OA, where leukocytes could have a dominant role through NF-kB production in subintima. The blocking of macrophageal and leukocyte NF-kB expression is a possible therapeutic target as a disease modifying drug.


2007 ◽  
Vol 1116 (1) ◽  
pp. 100-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. KOYAMA ◽  
T. OCHIAI ◽  
R. B. ROUNTREE ◽  
D. M. KINGSLEY ◽  
M. ENOMOTO-IWAMOTO ◽  
...  

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