BackgroundThe identification of biomarkers of post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) progression is of clinical importance. The aims of this study were: (1) to assess the abilities of various soluble proinflammatory mediators in plasma to distinguish patients with knee PTOA from controls; (2) to determine the correlations between the mediators in plasma and those mediators in synovial fluid (SF); and (3) to explore the associations of the mediators with radiographic PTOA severity.Materials and methodsThe concentrations of IL-1β, IL-6, IL-18, TNFα, and leptin were measured using ELISA. Nitric oxide was determined as nitrite/nitrate (NOx) using the Griess reaction.ResultsWe included 171 subjects (134 PTOA patients and 37 controls) and excluded patients with rheumatoid arthritis or gout. The ROC curve of plasma NOx had the highest AUC, a specificity of 100%, and a sensitivity of 84.4%. The combination of IL-6 and leptin proved to be the most discriminatory, with an AUC value of 0.933, a specificity of 96.7%, and a sensitivity of 85.7%. The levels of NOx, IL-6, IL-18, and leptin in plasma were significantly correlated with their levels in SF. Leptin levels in both plasma (p = 0.036) and SF (p = 0.041) and the synovial IL-18 level (p = 0.045) were correlated with the Kellgren–Lawrence (KL) grade. Early-stage PTOA (KL 1–2) was associated with a high concentration of IL-1β in plasma before and after (OR 6.235, 95% CI 1.362 to 28.552, p = 0.018) adjusting for age, gender, and BMI.ConclusionsCirculating NOx level and a combination of IL-6 and leptin permitted the strongest discrimination of patients with PTOA from controls. PTOA severity was correlated with leptin levels in plasma and SF and with the synovial IL-18 level. Early PTOA was associated with the circulating level of IL-1β.Level of evidenceIII (case–control study).
The administration of SkQ1 to rats at the dose of 50 nmol/kg for five days significantly increased the mRNA levels of transcription factor Nrf2 and of Nrf2-controlled genes encoding antioxidant enzymes SOD1, SOD2, CAT, and GPx4, whereas changes in the level of mRNA of SOD3 in the cerebral cortex of the rat brain were not significant. This was accompanied by activation of antioxidant enzymes (SOD, CAT, GPx, and GST) and increase in reduced glutathione concentration. Under oxidative stress induced by hyperoxia (0.5 MPa for 90 min), the mRNA level of transcription factor Nrf2 decreased, whereas changes in the transcriptional activity of Nrf2-induced genes (SOD1-3, CAT, GPx4) encoding antioxidant enzymes in the cortex of the rat brain hemispheres were insignificant. Under conditions of hyperoxia, lipid peroxidation intensity was increased, CAT was inhibited, and GST activity was moderately increased, whereas SOD and GPx activities in the rat brain cerebral cortex remained at the stationary level. Pretreatment with SkQ1 before the exposure to hyperbaric oxygenation led to an increase in mRNA level of transcription factor Nrf2 and of Nrf2-induced genes (SOD1-2, CAT, and GPx4) encoding antioxidant enzymes, whereas SOD3 expression in the cerebral cortex of the rat brain under oxidative stress was not changed. Concurrently, we observed an increase in activities of these antioxidant enzymes (SOD, CAT, GPx, and GST) and in level of reduced glutathione. We hypothesize that the protective effect of SkQ1 under hyperoxia-induced oxidative stress could be realized via direct antioxidant activity and through stimulation of the signaling defense system Keap1/Nrf2/ARE.
The article analyzes the main problems and contradictions in the formation of legal regimes for the regulation of robotics, artificial intelligence and other innovative technologies of our time. The work content shows the unpreparedness of modern legal science and practice to conceptual and legal design, legal and technical development of the regulatory legal acts aimed at the legislative fixation and regulation of the processes of using artificial intelligence and robots in public relations, as well as definition of responsibility and appropriate protection modes of legitimate interests, rights, freedoms in the system of personality-society-state. The subject of this study is the resolution of these problems and contradictions, as well as the identification of directions for the formation of a legal framework for the regulation of modern innovative technologies and digital processes unfolding in the modern society. The authors distinguish and analyze two consecutive stages: 1) development and introduction of necessary changes in the existing branches of Russian law; 2) conceptual-legal and doctrinal-legal formulation of key development priorities, as well as creation of a new integrated branch of law-robotics law, which has an independent subject and method of legal regulation.
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