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If good things come from above, do bad things come from below?

DOI: 10.1186/ar3007

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Abstract:

Finding the factors that initiate, or the mechanisms that lead to progression of, osteoarthritis (OA) has proven frustrating and largely unproductive. Identification of risk factors for the condition - such as prior trauma to the joint, elevated body weight and female sex - may have helped with management of OA but has done little to progress understanding of the underlying factors that drive it. OA research has been more difficult than research for some other diseases of the skeleton, for several important reasons. Early OA, at the level of symptoms, can be episodic, making it difficult to identify the disease and to follow it longitudinally. Since the main early symptom is pain, clinical trials of new therapies have been problematic. Animal experiments have been bedevilled by a lack of models that accurately replicate the human disease. And perhaps, as argued by a minority of workers in the field, disease initiators have been sought in the wrong place; that is, cartilage versus bone.The recent study of Tanamas and colleagues highlights the way in which new-generation imaging holds the promise of shedding new light on this old problem [1]. In particular, high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can now deliver objective, measurable information about all structures of the joint, including the amount and quality of articular cartilage, and is also a powerful tool to investigate the subchondral bone. The holy grail of clinical investigation, namely longitudinal study with quantitative endpoints, is now accessible for OA. What Tanamas and colleagues' study shows is important because it adds to emerging evidence that processes in the subchondral bone relate strongly to changes in the volumetric amount of articular cartilage. Specifically, bone marrow lesions (BMLs), the mysterious MRI-bright regions in the subchondral bone that occur more commonly in OA, were shown to be predictive of loss of cartilage and of formation of subchondral cysts. In turn, cysts were m

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