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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Strontium ranelate slows osteoarthritis damage in dogs by blocking

By Pelletier, Jean-Pierre et al.·Published in Annals of the rheumatic diseases·2013·University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre (CRCHUM), Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Strontium ranelate reduces the progression of experimental dog osteoarthritis by inhibiting the expression of key proteases in cartilage and of IL-1β in the synovium.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with osteoarthritis had their anterior cruciate ligaments surgically cut and then received a daily oral treatment of strontium ranelate (SrRan) for 12 weeks. The treatment helped reduce cartilage damage and preserved the collagen structure in the joints, especially at higher doses. Dogs receiving SrRan showed less thickening of the bone and lower levels of certain harmful proteins associated with joint damage. Overall, strontium ranelate appears to slow down the progression of osteoarthritis in dogs, making them more comfortable and improving their joint health.

People also search for: dog osteoarthritis treatment · strontium ranelate for dogs · dog joint pain relief

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To explore the disease-modifying effect, under therapeutic conditions, of strontium ranelate (SrRan) on the progression of joint structural changes and on the major pathophysiological pathways in an experimental osteoarthritis dog model. METHODS: Dogs underwent sectioning of the anterior cruciate ligament, and 4 weeks after surgery received oral treatment of SrRan 25, 50 or 75 mg/kg per day, or placebo for 12 weeks. Methods included macroscopy, picrosirius red staining, histology, subchondral bone histomorphometry, quantitative PCR, and ELISA for CTX-II level in serum. Strontium plasma and synovial fluid levels were also measured. RESULTS: At steady state, strontium blood exposures were within the clinical therapeutic range of osteoarthritis patients and correlated with strontium concentrations in synovial fluid. SrRan treatment significantly reduced the osteoarthritis cartilage lesions at all doses tested (p≤0.05). Significantly better preservation of the collagen network was also found in SrRan-treated dogs at 50 and 75 mg/kg per day (p=0.03). The osteoarthritis subchondral bone thickening observed in osteoarthritis-placebo dogs was significantly reduced by SrRan at 50 mg/kg per day (p=0.02). The increased gene expression levels of MMP-1, MMP-13 and cathepsin K in osteoarthritis cartilage were all significantly reduced by SrRan at 75 mg/kg per day (p≤0.03) as were, in osteoarthritis synovium, IL-1β at 50 and 75 mg/kg per day (p=0.05) and MMP-3 at all doses tested (p≤0.02). The serum level of CTX-II was reduced (p≤0.04) by SrRan at 16 weeks in dogs treated with 50 and 75 mg/kg per day. CONCLUSIONS: This study is the first to demonstrate in vivo in an animal model that SrRan reduced the progression of osteoarthritis structural changes. The inhibition of several key proteases as well as IL-1β may have contributed to the beneficial effect of SrRan.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23065732/