Abstract

Background. Osteoarthritis (OA) is associated with an activation of local inflammation and involves subchondral tissue of the joint.Objective: to conduct a systemic analysis of the publications on the association between OA and metabolic disorders in bones.Material and methods. The authors analyzed 3,926 publications on the studies of OA and metabolic disorders in bones tissue by the method of a topologic theory of recognition selected by the request “osteoarthritis AND (bone resorption OR osteopenia OR osteoporosis)” in the database of biomedical publications PubMed/MEDLINE. The control sampling included 4,000 articles randomly selected out of 97,331 found by the request “osteoarthritis NOT bone NOT resorption NOT osteopenia NOT osteoporosis” (i.e. publications on OA that do not cover issues of bone metabolism).Results. The associations between cartilaginous pathology and bone tissue destruction are mediated by anti-inflammatory cytokines, osteoblast and osteoclast balance impairments, steroid hormone imbalance, and carbohydrate metabolism. Bone metabolism disorders are associated with an intensification of OA-associated pain syndrome. Chondroprotective agents (chondroitin sulfate (CS), glucosamine sulfate (GS), and undenaturated collagen) block the activity of anti-inflammatory cytokines (NF-κB and toll-receptors), stimulate the activity of osteoblasts (bone tissue synthesizing cells), and decrease the excessive activity of osteoclasts (cells that degrade bone tissue).Conclusion. Pharmaceutically standardized forms of CS and GS can be used for the normalization of bone metabolism along with safe osteoptotective means (vitamin D, calcium, etc.) in patients with OA.

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