The urinary COMP assay with mAb 14G4 is useful for discriminating horses with osteoarthritis. The higher COMP levels in urine from such horses would be indicative of enhanced proteolytic activity, in addition to the increased COMP levels in the diseased joints.
Serum COMP concentrations changed significantly in response to exercise. Exercise may enhance movement of COMP into the circulation as well as change the basal turnover rate of COMP.
Calpain activation has been implicated in various pathologies, including neurodegeneration. Thus, calpain inhibition could effectively prevent spinal cord injury (SCI) associated with neurodegeneration. In the current study, a dog SCI model was used to evaluate the therapeutic potential of a selective calpain inhibitor (PD150606) in combination with methylprednisolone sodium succinate (MPSS) as an anti-inflammatory drug. SCI was experimentally induced in sixteen mongrel dogs through an epidural balloon compression technique. The dogs were allocated randomly into four groups: control, MPSS, PD150606, and MPSS+PD150606. Clinical evaluation, serum biochemical, somatosensory evoked potentials, histopathological, and immunoblotting analyses were performed to assess treated dogs during the study. The current findings revealed that the combined administration of MPSS+PD150606 demonstrated considerably lower neuronal loss and microglial cell infiltration than the other groups, with a significant improvement in the locomotor score. The increased levels of inflammatory markers (GFAP and CD11) and calcium-binding proteins (Iba1 and S100) were significantly reduced in the combination group and to a lesser extent in MPSS or PD150606 treatment alone. Interestingly, the combined treatment effectively inhibited the calcium-induced cleavage of p35, limited cdk5 activation, and inhibited tau phosphorylation. These results suggest that early MPSS+PD150606 therapy after acute SCI may prevent subsequent neurodegeneration via calpain inhibition.
Delayed healing associated with distal limb wounds is highly challenging in
equine clinical practice. This study aimed to evaluate healing rates between
chronic non-granulating wounds of horse distal limbs that were treated with
maltodextrin/ascorbic acid gel alone or in combination with povidone-iodine 1%
solution and those treated with povidone-iodine 1% only throughout the study
period (35 days) in clinical settings. The study was conducted on 18 adult
horses (3–15 years old). Based on the treatment regimen utilized, the
horses were divided into three groups (n = 6), with each group having a similar
mean wound area. The percentages of wound contraction, epithelialization, and
overall wound healing were determined weekly for each wound. By the end of the
study, the total wound healing percentage was significantly increased between
the study groups (
p
< 0.05). The use of
maltodextrin/ascorbic acid gel resulted in considerable wound contraction, rapid
epithelialization, and complication-free wound healing. Based on the findings of
this study, maltodextrin/ascorbic acid gel, independently or in combination with
a 1% povidone-iodine solution, might be applied as a safe and effective wound
healing promoting agent in horses with chronic non-granulating wounds.
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