Acute joint pathology and synovial inflammation is associated with increased intra-articular fracture severity in the mouse knee

  • Lewis, J.S.
  • Hembree, W.C.
  • Furman, B.D.
  • Tippets, L.
  • Cattel, D.
  • Huebner, J.L.
  • Little, D.
  • DeFrate, L.E.
  • Kraus, V.B.
  • Guilak, F.
  • Olson, S.A.
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Publication date
July 2011
Publisher
Published by Elsevier Ltd.
ISSN
1063-4584
Citation count (estimate)
51

Abstract

SummaryObjectivePost-traumatic arthritis is a frequent cause of disability and occurs most commonly and predictably after articular fracture. The objective of this investigation was to examine the effect of fracture severity on acute joint pathology in a novel murine model of intra-articular fracture.DesignLow and high energy articular fractures (n=25 per group) of the tibial plateau were created in adult male C57BL/6 mice. The acute effect of articular fracture severity on synovial inflammation, bone morphology, liberated fracture area, cartilage pathology, chondrocyte viability, and systemic cytokines and biomarkers levels was assessed at 0, 1, 3, 5, and 7 days post-fracture.ResultsIncreasing intra-articular fracture severity was associat...

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