Antibodies were used in radioimmunoassays with gel chromatography to detect the hyaluronic acidbinding region, core protein, and keratan sulfate of human cartilage protoeglycan in the synovial fluids of patients with rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, and osteoarthritis. All fluids contained proteoglycan that was mainly included on Sepharose CL4B; this result indicates cleavage of proteoglycan (which is normally excluded). The hyaluronic acidbinding region was the smallest and most commonly detected fragment. It was relatively free of keratan sulfate and core protein, and it could sometimes bind to hyaluronic acid. Other larger fragments containing core protein and/or keratan sulfate were detected in every fluid.
This model replicated key features of a human IAF, including surgical stabilization, inflammatory responses, and progression to osteoarthritic cartilage degeneration, thereby providing a potentially useful model for translating promising treatment options to clinical practice.
Single analyses of peripheral blood of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients showed a significant reduction in the mean value for keratan sulfate (KS) compared with that in control subjects, but the mean value for orosomucoid (OM) was elevated compared with that in control subjects. Some RA patients displayed highly elevated levels of hyaluronic acid (HA), while others exhibited normal levels. There was a significant inverse correlation between OM and KS content in RA patients, as well as a direct correlation between HA and OM. In longitudinal studies of RA patients, parallel changes in OM and HA and inverse changes between KS and OM or HA were commonly observed. Clinical analyses revealed that there was an inverse correlation between KS and morning stiffness, and direct correlations between the number of tender joints and HA, and between HA or the erythrocyte sedimentation rate and the number of joints with effusions. The reason(s) for the inverse correlation between KS and OM as an index of systemic inflammation remains to be established. Circulating HA represents an index of joint inflammation, for which a marker has not been previously available.
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