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Serum markers of systemic disease processes in osteoarthritis.
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1995
Year
InflammationRheumatologyRheumatoid DisorderMusculoskeletal ResearchOa LesionsDog ModelSerum MarkersCartilage DegenerationOsteoarthritisPathologyInflammatory Rheumatic DiseaseWound HealingMedicineOrthopaedic SurgeryInflammatory ArthritisRheumatoid ArthritisSerum LevelsConnective Tissue Disease
Serum levels of several molecules originating from joints and cartilages have been shown to rise during the preradiological stages of osteoarthritis (OA). Using a dog model of posttraumatic OA, we have shown that serum levels of markers of aggrecan degradation (antigenic keratan sulfate) and synovial proliferation/metabolism (hyaluronan) rise within 1-2 weeks after the injury and remain elevated for at least 13 weeks. These changes, which precede the development of OA lesions, are consistent with the view that traumatic injury to a single synovial joint gives rise to a state of hypermetabolism that is local at first but becomes systemic with time.