Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is a degenerative joint condition and a leading cause of physical disability in the United States. Quadriceps weakness and inflammatory cytokines contribute to the pathogenesis of knee OA, and both of which, increase with vitamin D deficiency. Other micronutrients, such as vitamins C and E and β-carotene, modulate inflammatory cytokines and decrease during inflammation. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that vitamin D deficiency associates with quadriceps weakness, an increase in serum cytokines, and a decrease in circulating micronutrients in subjects with knee OA. Subjects (age, 48±1 y; serum 25(OH)D, 25.8±1.1 ng/mL) with knee OA were categorized as vitamin D deficient (n=17; serum 25(OH)D≤20 ng/mL), insufficient (n=21; serum 25(OH)D 20–29 ng/mL), or sufficient (n=18; serum 25(OH)D≥30 ng/mL). Single-leg strength (concentric knee extension–flexion contraction cycles at 60 °/s) and blood cytokine, carotene (α and β), ascorbic acid, and tocopherol (α and γ) concentrations were measured. Quadriceps peak torque, average power, total work, and deceleration were significantly (all p<0.05) impaired with vitamin D deficiency. Serum γ-tocopherol concentrations were significantly (p<0.05) increased with vitamin D deficiency. In the vitamin D sufficient group, γ-tocopherol inversely correlated (r=−0.47, p<0.05) with TNF-α, suggesting a pro-inflammatory increase with a γ-tocopherol decrease despite a sufficient serum 25(OH)D concentration. We conclude that vitamin D deficiency is detrimental to quadriceps function, and in subjects with vitamin D sufficiency, γ-tocopherol could have an important anti-inflammatory role in a pathophysiological condition mediated by inflammation.
BackgroundThis study aimed to identify (1) if the postoperative increase in the neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) is different between contrasting knee arthroplasty procedures, and (2) if the NLR predicts venous thromboembolism (VTE) after total knee arthroplasty (TKA).Materials and methodsTo address the first objective, we retrospectively studied patients who underwent primary unilateral TKA (n = 111) or unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA; n = 74) between 2009 and 2012. Patients who required a blood transfusion, underwent autologous blood salvage, experienced any postoperative complication (such as VTE), or were re-admitted >90 days were excluded from analysis. For the second objective, we retrospectively identified patients (cases, n = 10) who underwent primary unilateral TKA between 2010 and 2012 and developed postoperative VTE (deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, or both) during inpatient care (postoperative day 1 or day 2). Cases were matched to surgeon, gender, body mass index, age, and date of surgery controls (n = 20) who underwent primary unilateral TKA without developing VTE before patient discharge. The NLR was calculated from the neutrophil and lymphocyte counts extracted from pre- and postoperative (day 1 and day 2) blood chemistry records.ResultsOn postoperative day 1, the NLR increase was exacerbated (p = 0.02) following TKA compared to UKA and predicted (p = 0.02) the occurrence of VTE in TKA patients prior to hospital discharge.ConclusionWe conclude that the NLR increase is greater following TKA compared to UKA and could serve as a matrix to predict or identify a patient susceptible of sustaining VTE after TKA.Level of evidence3.
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