Journal
JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 5, Pages 694-703Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jor.21309
Keywords
arthritis; animal model; pain; joint dysfunction; interleukin-1
Categories
Funding
- NIH [R01EB002263, R21AR052745, P01AR050245, K99AR057426, F32AR056190]
- North Carolina Biotechnology Center [CFG-8013]
- OREF/DePuy Orthopaedic Resident Educational Grant
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Interleukin-1 beta (IL1 beta) is a proinflammatory cytokine that mediates arthritic pathologies. Our objectives were to evaluate pain and limb dysfunction resulting from IL1 beta over-expression in the rat knee and to investigate the ability of local IL1 receptor antagonist (IL1Ra) delivery to reverse-associated pathology. IL1 beta over-expression was induced in the right knees of 30 Wistar rats via intra-articular injection of rat fibroblasts retrovirally infected with human IL1 beta cDNA. A subset of animals received a 30 mu l intra-articular injection of saline or human IL1Ra on day 1 after cell delivery (0.65 mu g/mu l hIL1Ra, n = 7 per group). Joint swelling, gait, and sensitivity were investigated over 1 week. On day 8, animals were sacrificed and joints were collected for histological evaluation. Joint inflammation and elevated levels of endogenous IL1 beta were observed in knees receiving IL1 beta-infected fibroblasts. Asymmetric gaits favoring the affected limb and heightened mechanical sensitivity (allodynia) reflected a unilateral pathology. Histopathology revealed cartilage loss on the femoral groove and condyle of affected joints. Intra-articular IL1Ra injection failed to restore gait and sensitivity to preoperative levels and did not reduce cartilage degeneration observed in histopathology. Joint swelling and degeneration subsequent to IL1 beta over-expression is associated limb hypersensitivity and gait compensation. Intra-articular IL1Ra delivery did not result in marked improvement for this model; this maybe driven by rapid clearance of administered IL1Ra from the joint space. These results motivate work to further investigate the behavioral consequences of monoarticular arthritis and sustained release drug delivery strategies for the joint space. (C) 2010 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 29:694-703, 2011
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