Prevention of the Posttraumatic Fibrotic Response in Joints
Abstract
The ongoing study addresses the critical clinical problem of posttraumatic joint stiffness, a pathology that reduces therange of motion (ROM) of injured joints and contributes to the development of osteoarthritis. The fundamental hypothesis that drives the current study is that pathological fibrotic response of injured joint tissues may be limited by targeting the formation of collagen fibrils, a main component of the fibrotic mass. Key preliminary data indicate the following: (i) in comparison to the non-treated control, deposition of newly-formed collagen fibrils in posterior capsules from injured knees of rabbits treated with the anti-fibrotic antibody is reduced significantly, (ii) in comparison to the non-treated control, the correct collagen III/collagen I ratio in posterior capsules from injured knees of rabbits treated with anti-fibrotic antibody is maintained, (iii) in comparison to the non-treated control, the ROM of injured knees of rabbits treated with anti-fibrotic antibody is greater. Ongoing studies with additional groups of animals will determine the statistical significance of the differences observed in the measured parameters. Completion of these experiments will define the utility of the anti-collagen I antibody to block excessive fibrosis associated withjoint injury.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Oct 01, 2015
- Accession Number
- AD1003216
Entities
People
- Pedro Beredjiklian