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Development of post-traumatic osteoarthritis models to evaluate effects of impact injury on joint health for clinical disease treatment and prevention

<p>Osteoarthritis is one of the most common, debilitating, musculoskeletal diseases in the world. Currently, there is no cure. It is well-known that a traumatic, joint injury increases the risk of developing post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA). Therefore, in order to improve clinical treatment and prevention strategies for post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA), a series of translational studies were conducted to develop research models to evaluate the effects of impact injury. </p><p> The first section of this dissertation (Ch. 1&ndash;2) provides a comprehensive introduction and literature review related to both clinical PTOA as well as previous research investigations of PTOA. The second section of this dissertation (Ch. 3&ndash;6) describes the methodology of optimizing a servo-hydraulic test machine to deliver a controlled impact injury (Ch. 3) as well as subsequent studies using this device to injure articular cartilage (Ch. 4) and cartilage-bone explants (Ch. 5&ndash;6). Further, the effects of dynamic, compressive loading to mimic walking after impact injury of cartilage-bone explants was investigated (Ch. 6). The third section of this dissertation (Ch. 7&ndash;8) details the development of an impactor device that may be used for pre-clinical, animal models. </p><p> Many significant findings were discovered through this dissertation work. Specifically, by using the proportional-integral-derivative (40, 0, 0) values, a large (25kN) servo-hydraulic test machine may be used to deliver a controlled impact injury to explants (Ch. 3). Biomarkers glycosaminoglycan (GAG) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE<sub>2</sub>) were elevated after cartilage impact injury with PGE2 having the highest mechanosensitivity than any other biomarker (Ch. 4). Energy absorbed during cartilage-bone injury is dependent upon trauma severity; PGE<sub>2</sub> and monocyte attractant protein (MCP-1) were elevated following cartilage-bone injury (Ch. 5). Dynamic, compressive loading retained cell viability in non-impacted cartilage-bone explants and mitigated GAG release in impacted explants; GAG and PGE<sub>2</sub> were elevated due to cartilage-bone injury whereas matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) and interleukin-8 (IL-8) were elevated due to injury plus dynamic, compressive loading (Ch. 6). The development of a 8mm diameter impactor does create articular cartilage damage (Ch. 7), albeit a smaller, 2mm diameter impactor creates higher impact stresses and may be used arthroscopically for pre-clinical animal models (Ch. 8). </p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PROQUEST/oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:10180779
Date09 December 2016
CreatorsWaters, Nicole Poythress
PublisherUniversity of Missouri - Columbia
Source SetsProQuest.com
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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