Abstract

The concentration and degradation of hyaluronic acid in the synovial fluid of carrageenin-induced arthritic joints of rabbits was studied. A 0.5-ml volume of 1% lambda-carrageenin was intra-articularly injected three times into a right knee joint, and saline into a left. After 5 d from the last injection, inflammatory changes were observed in the synovial membrane and synovial fluid, but not in the articular cartilage. In the inflammatory synovial fluid, lipid peroxide content, phosphatase activity and cell counts were significantly increased, but the copper concentration was not changed. Concentration of polymeric hyaluronic acid and total hyaluronic acid were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography using gel-permeation columns. Total hyaluronic acid was appreciably decreased in the inflammatory fluid. The polymeric hyaluronic acid determined was 38% of the total hyaluronic acid in the inflammatory fluid and 74% in the control fluid. This suggests that in the inflammatory fluid, molecular weights of hyaluronic acid are distributed in the broader range. The concentration of chondroitin sulphates was similar in both the inflammatory fluid and the control fluid, but the content ratio of chondroitin sulphates to hyaluronic acid was higher in the inflammatory fluid. In the inflamed synovial membrane, synthesis of hyaluronic acid as measured by incorporation of [14C]glucosamine into glycoconjugates was increased by about twice that in the control membrane.

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