5.2: Cartilage biology and osteoarthritis Flashcards

1
Q

Osteoarthritis is a disease of

A

The whole joint which involves the loss of articular cartilage

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2
Q

Healthy cartilage is composed of what three things

A

Proteoglycan
Type 2 collagen
Water

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3
Q

What is the function of Proteoglycan in cartilage

A

Exert swelling pressure, resists compression

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4
Q

Function of type 2 collagen in cartilage

A

Exerts high tensile strength

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5
Q

Characteristics of the chondrocyte

A

Producer and degraded of cartilage matrix
Highly metabolically active
Exists in relative hypoxia
Interactions with matrix : growth factors, mechano-transduction
No cell division after adolescence

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6
Q

Intrinsic anabolic and anti-catabolic factors for articular cartilage in the joint

A

TIMPs -Tissue Inhibitor of Metalloproteinases (1-4)
Growth factors e.g fibroblast growth factor (FGF-2), Insulin-like growth factor, transforming growth factor, activin A

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7
Q

Extrinsic anabolic and anti-catabolic factors for articular cartilage in the joint

A

Hormones e.g. testosterone, estrogen
Some drugs e.g FGF-18

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8
Q

Why does matrix loss occur

A

Imbalance in Excessive degradation and reduced anabolism/repair

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9
Q

3 processes in driving processes of osteoarthritis

A

Inflammation
Pain
Repair remodelling

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10
Q

Molecular changes during osteoarthritis onset

A

Excessive fragmentation of Proteoglycan into synovial fluid
Cartilage fragmented by collaginases
Loss of matrix resulting in inflammation

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11
Q

7 Risk factors for OA development

A

Age
Obesity
Mechanical factors
Family history
Chondrodysplasis
Other medical conditions e.g haemochromatosis
Secondary joint damage due to inflammatory arthropathies

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12
Q

Evidence for mechanical factors increasing OA (4)

A

Destabilising joint injuries increase risk of OA
Intra-articular fracture increase risk
Occupational examples - “coal miners back”
Mal-aligned joints get OA

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13
Q

What joints are usually protected from OA

A

Paralysed joints

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14
Q

Cartilage loss after injury is what kind of process and what does it depend on

A

Active biological process depending on an aggrecanase

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15
Q

Why is osteoarthritis increasing?

A

Older worldwide population
Increasing rates of obesity

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16
Q

How is osteoarthritis diagnosed?

A

Clinical diagnosis:
Joint pain typically on activity
Stiffness typical <30min
Loss of function
Examination findings: bony deformity at joint line

X-ray
Blood tests

17
Q

Blood test results used to diagnose osteoarthritis

A

Normal CRP
Rheumatoid arthritis tests are negative
Other tests can be relevant to exclude secondary causes

18
Q

Surgical options for OA

A

Total joint replacement - arthroplasty -hip or knee
Uni-compartmental replacement for knee possible
Trapeziectomy - removal of thumb bone

19
Q

Matrix catabolism results from

A

Signalling downstream of mechanical injury

20
Q

New treatments for OA

A

Treating pain
Improving function

21
Q

Post traumatic OA is

A

Arthritis that occurs post injury - inflammatory response in joint injury in response to trauma