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Biochemical analysis of normal articular cartilage in horses.
1990
Vachon A.M. | Keeley F.W. | McIlwraith C.W. | Chapman P.
Articular cartilage specimens from the distal articular surface of 32 radiocarpal bones from 24 2- to 5-year-old horses were analyzed. The total collagen content was determined on the basis of the 4-hydroxyproline content, using a colorimetric method. A method for estimating the proportions of types-I and -II collagen by measuringspectrophotometric densities of specific cyanogen bromide peptide bands from mixtures of types-I and -II collagen on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels was used. The cyanogen bromide peptides representative of each collagen types-I and -II were identified. The peptide ratios were then computed for each of several standards of type-I and -II mixtures. A standard curve was derived from the correlation between these ratios and the corresponding proportions of type-II collagen in standard mixtures. Galactosamine and glucosamine content (hexosamines) were measured by ion chromatography. Thegalactosamine-to-glucosamine ratio, chondroitin sulfate and keratan sulfate values, and total glycosaminoglycan content were derived from the measured hexosamine content. The total collagen content averaged 556 mg/g (55.6 mg/100 mg) of tissue (dry weight, [dw]). Type-II collagen was the major collagen type in normal articular cartilage specimens. The ratio of the area under the alpha 1 (II)CB10 peak to the area under the alpha 1 (I)CB 7,8 + alpha 1 (II)CB11 peak was a second-order polynomial function of the proportion of type-II collagen in the specimens. The mean galactosamine and glucosamine content were 20.6 mg/g and 7.9 mg/g (dw), respectively. The meangalactosamine-to-glucosamine ratio was 3.74 +/- 0.62. Chondroitin sulfate values, keratan sulfate values, and total glycosaminoglycan content were 53.3 +/- 4.9 mg/g, 19.9 +/- 3.6 mg/g, and 73.2 +/- 7.9 mg/g (dw), respectively. There was no significant correlation between the age of the horses and any of the chemical values (P>0.1). The biochemical composition of articular cartilage in the horse is similar to that of other species.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Biochemical changes in articular cartilage opposing full- and partial-thickness cartilage lesions in horses
1990
Using arthroscopic technique, identical diameter defects were created in the proximal articular surface of both intermediate carpal bones of 6 horses. One of each pair of defects was deepened to penetrate the subchondral plate. Removed cartilage was assayed for [35S] sulfate incorporation, total hexosamine content, and DNA content. Six weeks later, cartilage was harvested and similarly analyzed from the distolateral portion of the radius directly opposite the created lesions and the distomedial portion of the radius distant from the lesion. The repair tissue filling the full-thickness defect and the cartilage at the periphery of the partial-thickness lesion also were analyzed. There was a marked increase in synthetic activity (35S sulfate incorporation) opposite the full-thickness defect, compared with the cartilage opposite the partial-thickness defect. A marked decrease in glycosaminoglycan content in the cartilage opposite the full-thickness defect was found as compared with that opposite the partial-thickness defect. The repair tissue filling the full-thickness defect was highly cellular, high in synthetic activity, but low in glycosaminoglycan content. Insignificant changes occurred in the cartilage adjacent to the partial-thickness defect. On the basis of these results, we suggest that full-thickness defects at 6 weeks result in more detrimental change to the cartilage opposite it than do partial-thickness lesions of the same diameter.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Polysulfated glycosaminoglycan accelerates net synthesis of collagen and glycosaminoglycans by arthritic equine cartilage tissues and chondrocytes
1990
Glade, M.J.
Low molecular weight polysulfated glycosaminoglycan (PSGAG) stimulated net collagen and glycosaminoglycan synthesis by normal and arthritic equine fetlock cartilage tissues in organ culture. Arthritic tissues were more sensitive to PSGAG stimulation. The rates of cartilage-specific type-II collagen and chondroitin sulfate-rich glycosaminoglycan synthesis by confluent chondrocyte cell cultures obtained from normal and arthritic equine cartilage tissues were increased by 25 and 50 mg of PSGAG/ml. Cells from arthritic cartilage were also more sensitive to the presence of PSGAG. In addition, concentrations of PSGAG (25 and 50 mg/ml) approximate to those in synovial fluid after intra-articular injection of 250 mg of PSGAG inhibited the rate of collagen and glycosaminoglycan degradation in cell culture. These findings suggest that PSGAG may have a role in the healing of mild cartilage degeneration by encouraging the production of replacement hyaline matrix materials, while delaying their subsequent degradation. In contrast, growth of cell cultures was inhibited by PSGAG, suggesting that these compounds may fail to stimulate chondrocyte replication, a prerequisite for tissue regeneration. Nonetheless, these observations provide direct evidence of a truly chondroprotective role for low molecular weight PSGAG in the treatment of equine degenerative joint disease.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Evaluation of the prognostic value of positive-contrast shoulder arthrography for bilateral osteochondrosis lesions in dogs
1990
Bree, H. van
To investigate whether arthrographic findings had any prognostic value with respect to treatment and outcome of bilateral osteochondrosis, shoulder arthrograms (n = 80) from 40 dogs with bilateral lesions were evaluated. Arthrography was performed, using 1.5 to 4 ml of a 25% solution of meglumine-sodium diatrizoate, with admixture of 0.2 mg of epinephrine. A shoulder with signs of pain and lameness was surgically treated. The contralateral shoulder was treated conservatively, and the final outcome was compared with the arthrographic findings. In 37 dogs, signs of lameness and pain were associated with a loose cartilage flap and, in 3, with a detached cartilage flap. In 2 dogs, admitted with bilateral lameness, a loose cartilage flap was detected in both shoulders. Of 12 dogs with a detectable loose cartilage flap in the contralateral shoulder joint, 6 became lame 2 to 4 months after initial surgical intervention and needed bilateral surgery. In the contralateral joint, development of thick articular cartilage over the subchondral defect or a detached cartilage flap lodged in the caudal pouch of the shoulder joint was a favorable prognostic sign. Such dogs had no signs of lameness on the contralateral side during a follow-up period that ranged from 1 to 7 years.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Effects of age and prosthesis material on in vitro cartilage retention of laryngoplasty prostheses in horses
1990
Dean, P.W. | Nelson, J.K. | Schumacher, J.
Cartilage retention strengths of laryngoplasty prostheses were compared in larynges of 2-, 3-, and 4-year-old horses, using doubled polyester and expanded polytetrafluoroethylene prostheses. Bilateral laryngoplasties were performed on each of 15 (seven 2-year-old, two 3-year-old, and six 4-year-old) larynges, which were collected at an abbatoir. Prostheses were secured to a mechanical testing machine, and tension causing arytenoid cartilage abduction was applied, until total failure of the cartilage or prosthesis resulted. Tension caused cricoid cartilage failure in 1 specimen, and muscular process cartilage failure in the remainder. There was no significant effect of age, prosthetic material, or side of prosthesis placement on cartilage retention of the prostheses. Additionally, frequency of multiple load-displacement peaks, indicating partial muscular process failure, was not affected by age or prosthetic material variables.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Influence of variable content of dietary zinc on copper metabolism of weanling foals
1990
Bridges, C.H. | Moffitt, P.G.
The influence of variable zinc content (29.1, 250, 1,000 and 2,000 mg/kg of dry weight) in a basic diet containing 7.7 mg of copper/kg on the ability of weanling foals to maintain normal copper balance was investigated. Serum copper and zinc concentrations were monitored, and terminal hepatic copper and zinc contents were measured in 4 weanling foals fed the basic diet containing 29.1 mg of zinc/kg and in 2 foals each fed the higher-zinc diets. Foals fed the lower-zinc diets (29.1 and 250 mg/kg) maintained normal serum copper and zinc concentrations for 14 to 15 weeks, whereas those fed the 2 higher-zinc diets became hypocupremic within 5 to 6 weeks and were lame within 6 weeks, owing to cartilaginous disease characteristic of osteochondritis dissecans. Serum zinc concentration in the foals fed the 2 higher-zinc diets increased to > 2 microgram/ml within 2 weeks. Foals fed the high-zinc diets became lame after serum copper concentration had remained at 0.3 microgram/ml for > 1 week. Serum copper concentration in these arthritic foals was less than or equal to 0.2 microgram/ml at the end of the study. In lame foals, fractures of the cartilage of the articular and growth physes occurred through the zone of hypertrophic cells, and varied from bilateral to unilateral and from small to large. Free masses and flaps of cartilage attached to one side were numerous.
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