Immunohistochemical analysis of ageing and osteoarthritic articular cartilage.

Journal of Molecular Histology
Neeru GoyalOnkar Nath Nagi

Abstract

Articular cartilage degeneration seen in osteoarthritis is primarily the consequence of events within the articular cartilage that leads to the production of proteases by chondrocytes. 22 osteoarthritic cartilage specimens were obtained from patients with primary osteoarthritis (46-81 years) undergoing total knee replacement. 12 age-matched (41-86 years) and 16 young (16-40 years) non-osteoarthritic control cartilage specimens were obtained from the cadavers in the department of Anatomy and from patients undergoing lower limb amputation in Trauma center of PGIMER, Chandigarh. 5 μ thick paraffin sections were stained for osteocalcin, osteopontin, osteonectin and alkaline phosphatase to analyze their expression in hypertrophied chondrocytes and osteoarthritic cartilage matrix and to compare the staining intensity with that of normal ageing articular cartilage. Immunohistochemical staining of tissue sections revealed moderate to strong cytoplasmic staining for all four stains in all the specimens of the osteoarthritic group compared to age-matched control. The immunohistochemical scores were significantly higher in the osteoarthritic group for all four stains. The features of the osteoarthritic articular cartilage were markedly di...Continue Reading

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Citations

May 24, 2012·ISRN Rheumatology·Neeru Goyal, Madhur Gupta
Dec 20, 2011·Osteoarthritis and Cartilage·P M van der Kraan, W B van den Berg

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