Uric acid (UA) is known to activate the NLRP3 (Nacht, leucine-rich repeat and pyrin domain containing protein 3) inflammasome. When activated, the NLRP3 (also known as NALP3) inflammasome leads to the production of IL-18 and IL-1β. In this cohort of subjects with knee osteoarthritis (OA), synovial fluid uric acid was strongly correlated with synovial fluid IL-18 and IL-1β. Synovial fluid uric acid and IL-18 were strongly and positively associated with OA severity as measured by both radiograph and bone scintigraphy, and synovial fluid IL-1β was associated with OA severity but only by radiograph. Furthermore, synovial fluid IL-18 was associated with a 3-y change in OA severity, on the basis of the radiograph. We conclude that synovial fluid uric acid is a marker of knee OA severity. The correlation of synovial fluid uric acid with the two cytokines (IL-18 and IL-1β) known to be produced by uric acidactivated inflammasomes and the association of synovial fluid IL-18 with OA progression, lend strong support to the potential involvement of the innate immune system in OA pathology and OA progression.arthritis | inflammation | interleukin-18 | interleukin-1β | tumor necrosis factor alpha U ric acid (UA) is constitutively present in normal cells, increased in concentration when cells are injured, and released from dying cells (1). On the basis of a theory proposed by Matzinger, the products of cell stress and tissue damage may represent "danger signals" that function as endogenous adjuvants recognized by the immune system (2). Matzinger proposed that immunity is controlled by an internal conversation between tissues and the cells of the immune system (3). This proposal introduced a new immunological model of an immune system capable of sensing cellular stress and tissue damage (4). Shi subsequently identified uric acid as one of these principal endogenous danger signals released from injured cells and mediating the immune response to antigens associated with injured cells (1). The molecular mechanism of this innate immune response to uric acid was further shown to be the result of the activation of the NALP3 inflammasome, a cytosolic, multiprotein complex that mediates caspase activation by uric acid crystals, leading to the production of the active forms of IL-1β and IL-18 (5). Recently, Kono et al. demonstrated in an in vivo hepatoxicity mouse model that uric acid is a physiological regulator of the inflammation induced by tissue injury (6). These data form the basis for our hypothesis that synovial fluid uric acid is a factor regulating tissue inflammation, disease severity, and progression in osteoarthritis (OA).Uric acid is best known for its role in gout. When uric acid concentrations exceed the limit of solubility (∼6.8 mg/dL or even lower under conditions of low pH or temperature), crystal formation can ensue, which is capable of activating the NALP3 inflammasome (5) and triggering the acute severe attacks of joint inflammation characteristic of gout (7). Several studies have previously posited an association o...
Background:Digital infrared thermal imaging is a means of measuring the heat radiated from the skin surface. Our goal was to develop and assess the reproducibility of serial infrared measurements of the knee and to assess the association of knee temperature by region of interest with radiographic severity of knee Osteoarthritis (rOA).Methods:A total of 30 women (15 Cases with symptomatic knee OA and 15 age-matched Controls without knee pain or knee OA) participated in this study. Infrared imaging was performed with a Meditherm Med2000™ Pro infrared camera. The reproducibility of infrared imaging of the knee was evaluated through determination of intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) for temperature measurements from two images performed 6 months apart in Controls whose knee status was not expected to change. The average cutaneous temperature for each of five knee regions of interest was extracted using WinTes software. Knee x-rays were scored for severity of rOA based on the global Kellgren-Lawrence grading scale.Results:The knee infrared thermal imaging procedure used here demonstrated long-term reproducibility with high ICCs (0.50–0.72 for the various regions of interest) in Controls. Cutaneous temperature of the patella (knee cap) yielded a significant correlation with severity of knee rOA (R = 0.594, P = 0.02).Conclusion:The skin temperature of the patellar region correlated with x-ray severity of knee OA. This method of infrared knee imaging is reliable and as an objective measure of a sign of inflammation, temperature, indicates an interrelationship of inflammation and structural knee rOA damage.
Objective To assess differences in receipt of prescription contraception among women with and without chronic medical conditions. Methods This observational study used 3 years of administrative claims records for insured women aged 21–45 years who were enrolled in a commercial insurance company in Michigan between 2004 and 2009. Women were considered to have a chronic medical condition if they had at least two claims for one of the following conditions, in order of prevalence in our study population: hypertension, asthma, hypothyroidism, diabetes, obesity, rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, or systemic lupus erythematosus. Our primary outcome was receipt of prescription contraception, defined by a pharmacy claim or diagnostic or procedural code. We used multivariable logistic regression to estimate the association of chronic condition status with the odds of receiving prescription contraception within 3 years, adjusting for age, community-level socioeconomic status, total outpatient visits, and cervical cancer screening. Results Of 11,649 women studied, 16.0% (n=1,862) had at least one of the chronic conditions we considered. Of those with a chronic condition, 33.5% (n=623) received prescription contraception during the 3-year study period compared to 41.1% (n=4,018) of those without a chronic condition (p<0.001). After adjusting for covariates, women with a chronic condition remained less likely than women without a chronic condition to have received prescription contraception (adjusted odds ratio=0.85; 95% CI 0.76, 0.96; p=0.010). Conclusion Despite a greater risk for adverse outcomes with an unplanned pregnancy, women with these chronic conditions were less likely to receive prescription contraception.
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