| Literature DB >> 30460596 |
Santul Bapat1, Daniel Hubbard1, Akul Munjal1, Monte Hunter1, Sadanand Fulzele2,3.
Abstract
Osteoarthritis (OA) is one of the most common chronic conditions in the world today. It results in breakdown of cartilage in joints and causes the patient to experience intense pain and even disability. The pathophysiology of OA is not fully understood; therefore, there is currently no cure for OA. Many researchers are investigating the pathophysiology of the disease and attempting to develop methods to alleviate the symptoms or cure the OA entirely using animal models. Most studies on OA use animal models; this is necessary as the disease develops very slowly in humans and presents differently in each patient. This makes it difficult to effectively study the progression of osteoarthritis. Animal models can be spontaneous, in which OA naturally occurs in the animal. Genetic modifications can be used to make the mice more susceptible to developing OA. Osteoarthritis can also be induced via surgery, chemical injections, or non-invasive trauma. This review aims to describe animal models of inducing osteoarthritis with a focus on the models used on mice and their advantages and disadvantages that each model presents.Entities:
Keywords: Animal models; Chemically induced; Guinea pig; Horse; Mouse; Non-invasive; Osteoarthritis; Surgical
Year: 2018 PMID: 30460596 PMCID: PMC6246759 DOI: 10.1186/s40169-018-0215-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Med ISSN: 2001-1326
This table summarizes the basis, time of onset, advantages and disadvantages of each of the OA models discussed in this paper
| Model type | Model name and basis | Time of onset | Pros | Cons | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spontaneous | Naturally occurring—occurs as a result of wear and tear over the subject’s life | ~ 4–6 months old | Most natural progression | Long progression time | [ |
| Spontaneous | Genetically modified—occurs as a result of natural wear and tear over the subject’s life with higher susceptibility due to genetic selection | ~ 18 weeks old | Natural progression | Low generalizability | [ |
| Surgically induced | ACL transection—joint instability | ~ 3–10 weeks depending on method | High incidence | Need specially trained surgeon | [ |
| Surgically induced | Medical meniscectomy—joint instability | ~ 4 weeks post-surgery | High incidence | Need surgeon | [ |
| Chemically induced | Mono-iodoacetate—joint inflammation and chondrotoxicity | ~ 6 weeks from injection | High incidence | Progression not similar to natural progression in humans | [ |
| Chemically induced | Collagenase—joint inflammation and collagen breakdown | ~ 3 weeks from injection | High incidence | Progression not similar to natural progression in humans | [ |
| Non invasive induction | Intra-articular tibial plateau fracture—trauma to the knee and joint destabilization | ~ 8–10 weeks post injury | Useful in replicating acute traumatic OA (i.e. from accidents) | Need specialized equipment | [ |
| Non-invasive induction | Cyclic articular cartilage tibial compression—repeated trauma to the knee and joint destabilization | ~ 8–10 weeks post injury | Highly effective for studying chronic overuse | Need specialized equipment | [ |
| Non-invasive induction | Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) rupture via tibial compression overload—single powerful trauma and joint destabilization | ~ 8–16 weeks post injury | Single traumatic load is enough to induce OA | Need specialized equipment | [ |
This table summarizes the most frequently used models for each of the animals discussed in this review
| Animal | Frequently used models | References |
|---|---|---|
| Mouse | Spontaneous | [ |
| Horse | Osteochondral fragment-exercise model | [ |
| Sheep | Surgically induced | [ |
| Guinea Pig | Spontaneous (Dunkin Hartley) | [ |
This table indicates the appropriate uses for each type of murine OA model. An X indicates that a model is appropriate for a specific type of study
| OA pathophysiology | OA progression | OA therapies | Pain behavior | Post-traumatic OA studies | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Naturally occurring | X | X | X | X | [ | |
| Genetically modified | X | X | X | X | [ | |
| Surgically induced (all) | X | X | X | X | X | [ |
| Chemically induced (all) | X | [ | ||||
| Non-invasive induction | X | X | X | X | X | [ |