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骨关节炎是血管疾病吗?

Is Osteoarthritis a Vascular Disease?

机构信息

Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI 02903, USA.

Citigroup Biomedical Imaging Center, Weill Cornell Medical Center, New York, NY 10021, USA.

出版信息

Front Biosci (Landmark Ed). 2024 Mar 19;29(3):113. doi: 10.31083/j.fbl2903113.

Abstract

Osteoarthritis (OA) is now considered as a multifaceted disease affecting various articular tissues, including cartilage, bone, synovium, and surrounding ligaments. The pathophysiology strongly implicates intricate chemical communication, primarily through cytokines, leading to the production of degradative enzymes in cartilage, inflammatory peptides in synovium, and structural changes in bone, resulting in characteristic clinical features such as joint deformities and loss of cartilage space seen on X-rays. Recent studies highlight the previously underestimated role of subchondral bone in OA, revealing its permeability to cytokines and raising questions about the influence of abnormal perfusion on OA pathophysiology, suggesting a vascular component in the disease's etiology. In essence, alterations in bone perfusion, including reduced venous outflow and intraosseous hypertension, play a crucial role in influencing the physicochemical environment of subchondral bone, impacting osteoblast cytokine expression and contributing to trabecular remodeling, changes in chondrocyte phenotype, and ultimately cartilage matrix degeneration in OA. Dynamic contrast (gadolinium) enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) was used to quantify perfusion kinetics in normal and osteoarthritic subchondral bone, demonstrating that decreased perfusion temporally precedes and spatially correlates with cartilage lesions in both young Dunkin-Hartley (D-H) guinea pigs and humans with osteoarthritis. Pharmacokinetic analysis of DCE-MRI generated data reveals decreased tracer clearance and outflow obstruction in the medial tibial plateau of osteoarthritic guinea pigs, coinciding with progressive cartilage degradation, loss of Safranin O staining, and increased expression of matrix metalloproteinases and interleukin-1. Positron emission tomographic (PET) scanning using 18F-Fluoride reveals a relationship among bone blood flow, cartilage lesions, and 18F-Fluoride influx rate in OA, highlighting the intricate relationships between decreased perfusion, altered bone metabolism, and the progression of osteoarthritis. These findings, supported by 18F-Fluoride PET data, suggest the presence of venous stasis associated with outflow obstruction, emphasizing the role of decreased subchondral bone perfusion in the pathophysiology of OA and its association with reduced osteoblast activity and advanced cartilage degeneration.

摘要

骨关节炎(OA)现在被认为是一种多方面的疾病,影响各种关节组织,包括软骨、骨、滑膜和周围的韧带。病理生理学强烈暗示了复杂的化学通讯,主要通过细胞因子,导致软骨中降解酶的产生、滑膜中炎症肽的产生以及骨的结构变化,导致特征性的临床特征,如 X 光片上可见的关节畸形和软骨空间的丧失。最近的研究强调了先前被低估的软骨下骨在 OA 中的作用,揭示了其对细胞因子的通透性,并提出了异常灌注对 OA 病理生理学的影响问题,提示疾病的病因中有血管成分。本质上,骨灌注的改变,包括静脉回流减少和骨内高压,在影响软骨下骨的物理化学环境方面起着至关重要的作用,影响破骨细胞细胞因子的表达,并导致小梁重塑、软骨细胞表型的改变,最终导致 OA 中的软骨基质退化。动态对比(钆)增强磁共振成像(DCE-MRI)用于定量正常和骨关节炎软骨下骨的灌注动力学,表明在年轻的 Dunkin-Hartley(D-H)豚鼠和骨关节炎患者中,灌注减少在时间上先于并在空间上与软骨病变相关。DCE-MRI 生成的数据的药代动力学分析揭示了骨关节炎豚鼠内侧胫骨平台中示踪剂清除和流出阻塞的减少,这与进行性软骨降解、番红 O 染色丢失以及基质金属蛋白酶和白细胞介素-1表达增加相吻合。18F-氟化物的正电子发射断层扫描(PET)揭示了骨关节炎中骨血流、软骨病变和 18F-氟化物流入率之间的关系,突出了灌注减少、骨代谢改变和骨关节炎进展之间的复杂关系。这些发现得到了 18F-氟化物 PET 数据的支持,表明存在与流出阻塞相关的静脉淤滞,强调了软骨下骨灌注减少在 OA 病理生理学中的作用及其与成骨细胞活性降低和晚期软骨退化的关系。

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