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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Biomarkers in dog knee fluid after tibial plateau surgery

By Girling, S L et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2006·Faculty of Veterinary Science, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Use of biochemical markers of osteoarthritis to investigate the potential disease-modifying effect of tibial plateau levelling osteotomy.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 41 dogs with knee problems due to cranial cruciate ligament disease underwent a surgery called tibial plateau leveling osteotomy to see if it would help their joint health. Researchers checked the dogs' joint fluid before the surgery and again at six weeks and six months afterward to look for specific markers related to cartilage health. They found that the surgery did not significantly change the levels of these markers, suggesting that it may not affect the progression of osteoarthritis in these dogs.

People also search for: dog knee surgery recovery · tibial plateau leveling osteotomy outcomes · cranial cruciate ligament disease in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the hypothesis that the concentration of the 1/20/5D4 epitope of keratan sulphate, cartilage oligomeric matrix protein and total sulphated glycosaminoglycans in synovial fluids from dogs with cranial cruciate ligament disease would be affected by tibial plateau levelling osteotomy. In addition, to evaluate the hypothesis that medial meniscal release or meniscal injury would alter the expression of these candidate biomarkers. METHODS: Forty-one dogs with naturally occurring cranial cruciate ligament disease were recruited prospectively. Synovial fluids were collected from the index joint before surgery and six weeks and six months postsurgery. Following tibial plateau levelling osteotomy, synovial fluids were assayed for 1/20/5D4 epitope of keratan sulphate and cartilage oligomeric matrix protein concentration using an inhibition ELISA and for sulphated glycosaminoglycans using a direct dye-binding assay. RESULTS: The sulphated glycosaminoglycans ratio did not change significantly during the study. Medial meniscal injury at entry was associated with lower concentrations of synovial fluid cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (P<0.05, unpaired t test). There was no association between medial meniscal release and the changes in marker concentrations, either from 0 to six weeks or 0 to six months. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Tibial plateau levelling osteotomy did not significantly alter the expression of the named candidate biomarkers. These findings reflect the limited nature of the arthrotomy or indicate that tibial plateau levelling osteotomy does not influence the progression of osteoarthritis (OA). From these studies, there is no evidence that tibial plateau levelling osteotomy affects cartilage metabolism.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17201821/