Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Inflammation after gold bead treatment for dog hip arthritis
By Lie, K-I et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2011·Department of Basic Sciences and Aquatic Medicine·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Inflammatory response to therapeutic gold bead implantation in canine hip joint osteoarthritis.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with hip joint osteoarthritis received gold bead implants to help reduce pain and improve movement. After the procedure, the dogs showed some inflammation around the implants, which is a normal response as the body reacts to the foreign material. The inflammation included a mix of immune cells, but it was not excessive, suggesting that the gold beads might still provide benefits without causing too much irritation. This treatment could help manage chronic pain in dogs with hip issues, but more research is needed to fully understand how it works.
People also search for: dog hip pain treatment · gold bead implants for dogs · osteoarthritis in dogs symptoms
Abstract
Inflammatory changes associated with periarticular pure gold bead implants were studied in dogs involved in a clinical trial investigating motor dysfunction and chronic pain owing to hip joint dysplasia and osteoarthritis. Gold beads were percutaneously implanted via a needle into different locations surrounding the greater trochanter of the femur. Nine dogs with implants were necropsied. In all examined animals, characteristic histologic lesions were observed in the tissue surrounding the gold implants--namely, a fibrous capsule composed of concentric fibroblasts intermixed with a variable number of inflammatory cells and a paucicellular innermost layer of collagen with a few fibrocyte-like cells in empty lacunae. Lymphocytes dominated the inflammatory infiltrate, with rarely observed macrophages present in close proximity to the implant site. No giant cells were observed. Immunohistochemistry showed mixed populations of lymphocytes, both CD3 positive (T cells) and CD79a positive (B cells), which in some cases formed lymphoid follicles. Diffuse inflammatory changes were present to a minor extent in the perimysium and surrounding fascia. The inflammation observed in dogs is similar to that observed with gold implants in humans. It is possible that the clinically beneficial effect of gold beads for chronic osteoarthritis depends on sustained localized inflammation with localized release of soluble mediators. The encapsulation of the implant by a paucicellular and poorly vascularized fibrous capsule may help prevent an exaggerated inflammatory reaction by sequestering the gold bead from the surrounding tissue.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20861497/