| Literature DB >> 20602810 |
Martin K Lotz1, Virginia B Kraus.
Abstract
Joint trauma can lead to a spectrum of acute lesions, including osteochondral fractures, ligament or meniscus tears and damage to the articular cartilage. This is often associated with intraarticular bleeding and causes posttraumatic joint inflammation. Although the acute symptoms resolve and some of the lesions can be surgically repaired, joint injury triggers a chronic remodeling process in cartilage and other joint tissues that ultimately manifests as osteoarthritis in a majority of cases. The objective of the present review is to summarize information on pathogenetic mechanisms involved in the acute and chronic consequences of joint trauma and discuss potential pharmacological interventions. The focus of the review is on the early events that follow joint trauma since therapies for posttraumatic joint inflammation are not available and this represents a unique window of opportunity to limit chronic consequences.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20602810 PMCID: PMC2911903 DOI: 10.1186/ar3046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Pathogenesis of posttraumatic cartilage degradation
| Immediate (seconds) | Acute (months) | Chronic (years) |
|---|---|---|
| Cell necrosis | Apoptosis | Joint tissue remodeling |
| Collagen rupture | Leukocyte infiltration | |
| Glycosaminoglycan loss | Inflammatory mediators | |
| Hemarthrosis | Extracellular matrix degradation | Inflammation |
| Deficient lubricants | ||
| Arthrofibrosis |
Potential targets and drugs for pharmacological intervention in posttraumatic arthritis
| Target | Drugs | References |
|---|---|---|
| Caspases | Small molecule inhibitors | [ |
| Proinflammatory cytokines (TNFα, IL-1, IL-6) | Neutralizing antibodies, IL-converting enzyme, TACE inhibitors | [ |
| Cartilage repair | Growth factors (BMP-7, FGF-2, FGF-18, IGF-1) | [ |
| Matrix-degrading enzymes (matrix metalloproteinases, aggrecanases, cysteine-dependent cathepsins, neutrophil-derived enzymes) | Small-molecule inhibitors, TIMP | [ |
| Oxygen radicals | SOD, SOD mimetics | [ |
| Lubricant deficiency | Lubricin, hyaluronan | [ |
| Anti-inflammatory cytokines | [ |
SOD, superoxide dismutase; TACE, TNFα converting enzyme; TIMP, tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases.
Posttraumatic osteoarthritis: needs, opportunities and challenges
| Therapies needed for posttraumatic inflammation and osteoarthritis prevention |
| Readily identified population at high risk for osteoarthritis |
| Pathways and targets identified |
| Several clinical-stage therapeutic candidates |
| Therapeutic window immediately following injury |
| Long latency period until overt structural change |
| Clinical trials for osteoarthritis prevention depend on surrogate markers |