Abstract

IntroductionViscosupplementation by intra-articular injection of hyaluronic acid (HA) is a widely used treatment for lower limb osteoarthritis. However, the injected HA is rapidly degraded by reactive oxygen species (ROS), limiting its time of intra-articular residence. Optimizing clinical effectiveness of viscosupplementation by reducing HA degradation in situ, and therefore increasing the time of contact with the diseased tissue, is a challenging research approach. Mannitol, a powerful ROS scavenger, is a good candidate for this. The aim of this study was to compare in vitro the resistance to ROS-mediated degradation of two marketed viscosupplements (one linear and one cross-linked) to that of two novel viscosupplements combining HA and mannitol.MethodsA HA viscosupplement at a concentration of 10 g/L (HA 1%), was compared to a HANOX-M, a novel viscosupplement made of a mixture of HA and mannitol. In a second experiment, Hylan G-F 20, a partially cross-linked viscosupplement, was compared to a HANOX-M-XL, a novel cross-linked viscosupplement made of a HA and mannitol (35 g/L). The four HA viscosupplements were subjected to oxidative stress generated by the addition of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and their rheological behavior (elastic moduli [G′], viscous moduli [G″], and complex viscosity [|η*|]) were compared before and after the oxidative stress exposure.ResultsThe two viscosupplements not containing mannitol HA were rapidly degraded by H2O2, as demonstrated by the dramatic decrease of |η*|. On the other hand, the rheological properties of HA containing mannitol were not substantially modified in the presence of H2O2.ConclusionThis in vitro study demonstrates that mixing mannitol with HA protects the viscosupplement from ROS-mediated degradation and might therefore increase its intra-articular residence time without substantially modifying its rheological behavior. This in vitro study has to be followed by clinical trials designed to assess whether the addition of mannitol to HA might improve the efficiency and/or the duration of action of viscosupplementation.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s40744-014-0001-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Viscosupplementation by intraarticular injection of hyaluronic acid (HA) is a widely used treatment for lower limb osteoarthritis

  • This in vitro study demonstrates that mixing mannitol with HA protects the viscosupplement from

  • reactive oxygen species (ROS)-mediated degradation and might increase its intra-articular residence time without substantially modifying its rheological behavior. This in vitro study has to be followed by clinical trials designed to assess whether the addition of mannitol to HA might improve the efficiency and/or the duration of action of viscosupplementation

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Summary

Introduction

Viscosupplementation by intraarticular injection of hyaluronic acid (HA) is a widely used treatment for lower limb osteoarthritis. HA is produced in synovial joints by hyalocytes located in the synovial membrane and is released into the SF [3] It plays a major role in lubrication, shock absorption, and viscoelastic behavior of the SF [3] involving entanglements in HA and proteins/HA association based mainly on electrostatic interactions. When the joint is subjected to fast impact (i.e., running or jumping) HA molecules do not have time enough to realign and exhibit elastic behavior, allowing shock absorption This change in behavior is called viscoelastic behavior based on the temporary network formed by chain entanglements (as observed in dynamic experiments) and usually corresponds to a nonNewtonian behavior in flow experiments

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