4.5 Article

The infrapatellar fat pad is affected by injury induced inflammation in the rabbit knee: use of dexamethasone to mitigate damage

Journal

INFLAMMATION RESEARCH
Volume 65, Issue 6, Pages 459-470

Publisher

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00011-016-0928-z

Keywords

Glucocorticoid; Dexamethasone; Inflammation; Infrapatellar fat pad; Knee injury; Rabbit model

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Alberta Innovates Health Solutions OA Team Grant
  3. Canadian Arthritis Network/The Arthritis Society
  4. Cumming School of Medicine

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The health of the infrapatellar fat pad (IFP) has been linked to pain, joint inflammation, and the onset of post-traumatic osteoarthritis. Thus, early inflammation effects on the IFP could have long term sequelae on joint integrity. This study was designed to characterize the natural history of the IFP in a model of surgically induced knee injury and inflammation, and to test the efficacy of one intra-articular (IA) administration of dexamethasone (DEX) immediately following surgery. An IA bone drill hole injury to the rabbit knee was conducted and immediately treated with DEX (n = 12). Early and late post-surgical time-points were investigated (48 h and 9 weeks) and the outcome measures were analysis of IFP histology, mRNA levels for relevant molecules, and protein levels for a subset of cytokines. Data were analyzed against a surgical control (injury without treatment; n = 12), a surgical sham (capsular incision only; n = 12), and normal control (n = 6). Single IA injection of DEX (0.5 mg/kg), administered at the completion of surgery. IFPs from injured joints exhibited significantly increased cellularity and early fibrosis at 48 h post surgery. While the histological inflammation from a capsular incision alone resolved, knee injured animals progressed to a significantly more fibrotic IFP by 9 weeks. DEX significantly lowered histological scores at 48 h, but not at the 9 weeks. DEX did not influence mRNA levels for IL-1 beta, 6, and 8, however, protein analysis indicated that IL-8 levels were lower in DEX treated joints. DEX resulted in significantly elevated expression of mRNA for MCP-1, leptin, and VEGF. One IA administration of a glucocorticoid appears to mitigate the initial inflammation within the joint, but is not sufficient to protect the joint to 9 weeks post-surgery.

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