Injection of kaolin/carrageenan in the rat knee joint induces progressive experimental knee osteoarthritis

Pain(2023)

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摘要
Supplemental Digital Content is Available in the Text.Injection of kaolin/carrageenan (K/C) in the rat knee joint models the physical and psychiatric features of human osteoarthritis. Experimental osteoarthritis develops progressively, allowing the study of disease mechanisms and evaluation of therapeutic strategies to halt disease progression at different stages. Osteoarthritis (OA), the most common joint disorder worldwide, is characterized by progressive degeneration of articular and periarticular structures, leading to physical and emotional impairments that greatly affect the quality of life of patients. Unfortunately, no therapy has been able to halt the progression of the disease. Owing to the complexity of OA, most animal models are only able to mimic a specific stage or feature of the human disorder. In this work, we demonstrate the intraarticular injection of kaolin or carrageenan leads to the progressive degeneration of the rat's knee joint, accompanied by mechanical hyperalgesia and allodynia, gait impairments (reduced contact area of the affected limb), and radiological and histopathological findings concomitant with the development of human grade 4 OA. In addition, animals also display emotional impairments 4 weeks after induction, namely, anxious and depressive-like behaviour, important and common comorbidities of human OA patients. Overall, prolonging kaolin or carrageenan-induced monoarthritis mimics several important physical and psychological features of human OA in both male and female rodents and could be further applied in long-term studies of OA-associated chronic pain.
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knee osteoarthritis,rat knee joint,knee joint,kaolin/carrageenan
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