Tibial Osteotomy as a Mechanical Model of Primary Osteoarthritis in Rats

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Abstract

This study has presented the first purely biomechanical surgical model of osteoarthritis (OA) in rats, which could be more representative of the human primary disease than intra-articular techniques published previously. A surgical tibial osteotomy (TO) was used to induce degenerative cartilage changes in the medial knee of Sprague-Dawley rats. The presence of osteoarthritic changes in the medial knee compartment of the operated animals was evaluated histologically and through analysis of serum carboxy-terminal telepeptides of type II collagen (CTX-II). In-vivo biomechanical analyses were carried out using a musculoskeletal model of the rat hindlimb to evaluate the loading conditions in the knee pre and post-surgically. Qualitative and quantitative medial cartilage degeneration consistent with OA was found in the knees of the operated animals alongside elevated CTX-II levels and increased tibial compressive loading. The potential avoidance of joint inflammation post-surgically, the maintenance of internal joint biomechanics and the ability to quantify the alterations in joint loading should make this model of OA a better candidate for modeling primary forms of the disease in humans.

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Britzman, D., Igah, I., Eftaxiopoulou, T., Macdonald, W., & Bull, A. M. J. (2018). Tibial Osteotomy as a Mechanical Model of Primary Osteoarthritis in Rats. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-23405-3

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