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MECHANICAL ARTHROPATHY: CARTILAGE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY AND OSTEOARTHRITIS

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Title: MECHANICAL ARTHROPATHY: CARTILAGE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY AND OSTEOARTHRITIS


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MECHANICAL ARTHROPATHYCARTILAGE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
AND OSTEOARTHRITIS
  • Grant W. Cannon, M.D.
  • Friday, November 18, 2005

2
OsteoarthritisTerminology
  • Osteoarthritis
  • Osteoarthrosis
  • Degenerative Joint Disease
  • Hypertrophic Arthropathy

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OsteoarthritisDefinition
  • Progressive disintegration of articular cartilage
  • Formation of new bone in the floor of the
    cartilage lesions (eburnation) and at the joint
    margins (osteophtyes)

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OsteoarthritisNormal Cartilage Review
  • Nutrition
  • Chondrocytes
  • Collagen
  • Proteoglycans
  • Hyaluronic Acid

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Normal Cartilage ReviewComponents
  • Water - 65-80 of cartilage is water
  • Major matrix components- 90 of dry weight
  • Proteoglycans (particularly aggrecan)
  • Collagen
  • Chondrocytes 1-2 of volume
  • Other important components
  • Enzymes - E.g. Matrix metaloproteinases (MMPs) -
    e.g. collagenase
  • Enzyme inhibitors. E.g. Tissue inhibitors of
    metaloproteinases (TIMP)

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Normal Cartilage ReviewChondrocytes
  • Chondrocytes 1-2 of volume
  • Biosynthetically active, but relatively quiescent
  • Produce proteoglycans, but little collagen
  • Source of enzymes and enzyme inhibitors

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Normal Cartilage ReviewCollagen
  • Types of collagen
  • Type II in hyaline cartilage
  • Type II and Type I in fibrocartilage
  • Vertical orientation in deep regions
  • Horizontal orientation in superficial regions

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Normal Cartilage ReviewProteoglycans - I
  • Properties
  • Hydrophilic
  • Polar
  • Components
  • Glycosaminoglycans
  • Core protein - binds GAGs to make proteoglycans
  • Hyaluronic Acid - Non-covalent binding

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Normal Cartilage ReviewProteoglycans -
Components
  • Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) - "acid
    mucopolysaccharides
  • Chondroitins
  • Heparins
  • Keratan sulfates
  • Core protein - binds GAGs to make proteoglycans
  • Hyaluronic Acid - Non-covalent binding
  • Most common cartilage proteoglycan is aggrecan

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OsteoarthritisNormal Cartilage Review
  • Nutrition
  • Chondrocytes
  • Collagen
  • Proteoglycans
  • Hyaluronic Acid

15
Pathology of Osteoarthritis
  • Gross Pathology
  • Biochemical Abnormalities

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Pathology of OsteoarthritisGross Pathology
  • Fibrillation and flaking of the cartilage surface
  • Loss of cartilage
  • Subchondral sclerosis (Eburnation)
  • Osteophyte formation

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Pathology of OsteoarthritisGross Pathology
  • Fibrillation and flaking of the cartilage surface
  • Loss of cartilage
  • Subchondral sclerosis (Eburnation)
  • Osteophyte formation

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Pathology of OsteoarthritisBiochemical
Abnormalities
  • Increase in water content
  • Change in proteoglycans (PGs)
  • Collagen
  • Chondrocyte - damage and loss of chondrocytes is
    a late finding in OA
  • Possible role of inflammation.

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Pathology of OsteoarthritisBiochemical
Abnormalities
  • Change in proteoglycans (PGs)
  • Increased turnover and degradation
  • Decrease in PG aggregation (smaller PGs)
  • Increase in extractable PGs
  • Decrease in chondroitin sulfate length
  • Change in GAG composition

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Pathology of OsteoarthritisBiochemical
Abnormalities
  • Collagen
  • Increase in collagen synthesis - a reflection of
    increased turnover
  • Production of some type I collagen

28
Pathology of OsteoarthritisBiochemical
Abnormalities
  • Chondrocyte - damage and loss of chondrocytes is
    a late finding in OA
  • Possible role of inflammation
  • Increase in cytokine levels (IL-1 and TNF-")
  • Unclear what represent the primary process

29
Pathology of OsteoarthritisBiochemical
Abnormalities
30
Pathology of OsteoarthritisBiochemical
Abnormalities
31
Pathology of Osteoarthritis
  • Gross Pathology
  • Biochemical Abnormalities

32
OsteoarthritisRisk Factors
33
OsteoarthritisRisk Factors
  • Increasing age
  • Women
  • Obesity
  • Trauma (Heavy exercise on a normal joint has not
    generally not been associated with increased OA)
  • Inherited genetic mutations of collagen
  • Other causes of joint injury (e.g. inflammatory
    arthritis, congenital dislocations, etc)

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OsteoarthritisClinical Manifestation
  • Symptoms
  • Physical Finding
  • Laboratory

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Clinical ManifestationSymptoms
  • Mechanical joint pain
  • "Jelling" sensation
  • Absence of morning stiffness

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Clinical ManifestationPhysical Finding
  • Local tenderness
  • Bony swelling
  • Crepitus

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Clinical ManifestationLaboratory
  • Synovial Effusion - non-inflammatory
    (lt2,000 WBCs/mm3)
  • Other test normal

39
OsteoarthritisJoint Distribution
  • Large joints of the lower extremities (Hips and
    Knees)
  • Distal interphalangeal joints (DIPs) - Heberdon's
    Nodes
  • Proximal interphalangeal joints (PIPs) -
    Bouchard's Nodes
  • Shoulder involvement is rare

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OsteoarthritisRadiographic Manifestations
  • Joint space narrowing (cartilage loss)
  • Subchondral sclerosis (Eburnation)
  • Osteophyte formation
  • Subchondral cysts

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OsteoarthritisRadiographic Manifestations
  • Joint space narrowing (cartilage loss)
  • Subchondral sclerosis (Eburnation)
  • Osteophyte formation
  • Subchondral cysts

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Osteoarthritis ClassificationPrimary
  • Idiopathic
  • Generalized osteoarthritis
  • Erosive osteoarthritis

52
Osteoarthritis ClassificationSecondary
  • Congenital or developmental defects
  • Post-traumatic
  • Due to prior inflammatory joint disease
  • Metabolic disorders
  • Endocrinopathies
  • Familial genetic disorders
  • Neuropathic disorders/Charcot joints
  • Miscellaneous

53
Osteoarthritis Management
  • Goals
  • Non-medical therapy
  • Medical therapy
  • Joint injection
  • Alternative therapies under investigation
  • Surgery

54
Osteoarthritis ManagementGoals
  • Pain relief
  • Minimize disability
  • Stopping or delaying the destructive process

55
Osteoarthritis ManagementNon-Medical Therapy
  • Weight reduction
  • Physical therapy
  • Maintenance of muscle function
  • Maintenance of range of motion
  • Avoid weight bearing exercises (e.g. jogging)
  • Appliances (bathtub bars, crutches, walkers,
    elevated toilet seat, etc.)

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Osteoarthritis ManagementMedical Therapy
  • Non-narcotic analgesia (e.g. acetaminophen)
  • Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
  • Specific COX-2 inhibitors

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Osteoarthritis ManagementJoint Injection
  • Corticosteroids
  • Hyaluronate preparations

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Osteoarthritis ManagementAlternative Therapies
  • Chondroitin sulfate
  • Glucosamine
  • Recent data
  • No benefit over placebo in most patients
  • No adverse events

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Osteoarthritis ManagementSurgery
  • Osteotomy
  • Total joint replacement
  • Joint fusion

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Diffuse IdiopathicSkeletal Hyperostosis
  • Nomenclature
  • DISH
  • Forrestier's Disease
  • Characteristics
  • Variable clinical symptoms
  • No specific treatment program

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Diffuse IdiopathicSkeletal Hyperostosis
  • Characteristics
  • Calcification of the anterior spinal ligament
  • Flowing osteophytes
  • Involvement of at least four contiguous vertebral
    bodies
  • Sparing of posterior elements
  • Maintenance of disc height

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Normal Cervical Spine
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Diffuse IdiopathicSkeletal Hyperostosis
  • Nomenclature
  • Characteristics
  • Variable clinical symptoms - often asymptotic
  • No specific treatment program

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Osteochondritis Dessicans
  • Clinical Features
  • Articular cartilage and underlying bone loose in
    the joint.
  • Frequently associated with minor trauma
  • Often a familial tendency
  • Often seen in young adults

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Osteochondritis Dessicans
  • Management
  • Surgical Repair
  • Some cases may be observed and fragments removed

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Chondromalacia Patellae
  • Clinical Characteristics
  • Thinning and damage of cartilage of
    patellofemoral joint
  • More common in women
  • May be associated with subluxation

73
Chondromalacia Patellae
  • Management
  • Quadriceps muscle strengthening exercises
  • Patellar taping
  • Non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
  • Surgery
  • Lateral release
  • Avoid major surgery (e.g. patellectomy)

74
Neuropathic Arthritis
  • Clinical Features
  • Diseases associated with Neuropathic arthritis
  • Management

75
Neuropathic ArthritisClinical features
  • Sensory neurologic deficit
  • Joint deformity and destruction out of proportion
    to the severity of pain.
  • Painless in the face of marked deformity
  • Less painful than expected in view of the degree
    of deformity.
  • Characteristically, there is significant
  • Hypertrophic bone formation,
  • Subchondral sclerosis,
  • Severe cartilage degeneration
  • Loose bone fragments.

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Neuropathic ArthritisDiseases Associated with
Neuropathic Arthritis
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Syringomyelia
  • Syphilis with tabes dorsalis
  • Any peripheral neuropathy

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Neuropathic ArthritisManagement
  • Education
  • Reduce joint trauma
  • DO NOT replace with artificial joints

81
Osteonecrosis(Avascular Necrosis/Aseptic
necrosis)
  • Pathophysiology
  • Diseases associated with osteonecrosis
  • Clinical Stages - In all stages joint space
    (cartilage) is maintained.
  • Diagnosis
  • Management

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OsteonecrosisPathophysiology
  • Compromise of the blood supply to bone
  • May in some cases be the result of increase in
    marrow fat and an increase in pressure within the
    bone
  • May involve many sites - Hip is the most common
    site

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OsteonecrosisDiseases associated with
osteonecrosis
  • Corticosteroids
  • Glucocorticoid treatment (e.g. prednisone)
  • Cushings disease
  • Trauma
  • Inflammatory arthritis
  • Systematic lupus erythematosus
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Hematologic disorders
  • Hypercoagulability (antiphospholipid syndrome)
  • Hemoglobinophathies (e.g. Sickle cell disease)





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OsteonecrosisDiseases associated with
osteonecrosis
  • Infiltrative disorders
  • Gauchers disease
  • Decompression sickness (e.g. deep sea divers)
  • Alcoholism
  • Cirrhosis
  • Malignancies
  • Idiopathic

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OsteonecrosisClinical Stages
  • Stage 0 - No symptoms, normal radiographs,
    abnormal MRI
  • Stage 1 - Symptoms, normal radiographs, abnormal
    MRI
  • Stage 2 - Patchy mottled sclerosis
  • Stage 3 - Early bone collapse - Subcortical band
    immediately under the articular cartilage
    (crescent sign)
  • Stage 4 - Late bone collapse - flattening of
    femoral head

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OsteonecrosisDiagnosis
  • Plan radiographs
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) - EARLY
  • Bone Scans
  • May initially appear "cold" (decrease uptake)
    showing decreased blood flow.
  • Later the affected area may appear "not'
    (increased uptake) showing revascularization and
    appositional new bone formation.
  • Bone marrow pressure measurement and venography
  • Bone biopsy

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OsteonecrosisManagement
  • No proven effective treatment
  • Some preliminary results with early lesions
  • Vascular bone grafts
  • Core decompression
  • Surgery with joint replacement in advanced
    cases.

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MECHANICAL ARTHROPATHYCARTILAGE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
AND OSTEOARTHRITIS
  • Questions?
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