Abstract

Degenerative hip joint disease was induced in dogs by extra-articular surgery that created a condition that mimics hip dysplasia. Decreased acetabular coverage of the femoral head gave altered mechanical load, with ensuing cartilage degeneration. For comparison, degenerative knee joint disease was induced in other dogs by transection of the anterior cruciate ligament of the knee. The femoral head articular cartilage showed macroscopic signs of degeneration within a month. No macroscopical changes of synovitis were present. Chemical analysis of cartilage samples showed loss of proteoglycans. Guanidine hydrochloride extracts of the cartilage contained proteoglycan fragments that could be separated by equilibrium density gradient centrifugation in cesium chloride. The data indicate that proteoglycans are fragmented by proteolytic cleavage and lost from the cartilage. The proteoglycans remaining in the tissue are smaller and have lost the ability to aggregate with hyaluronic acid. Similarly, in experimental knee joint osteoarthritis, the proteoglycan content of the cartilage decreased. The structural changes of those proteoglycans remaining were of a different nature, with no changes in proteoglycan size or aggregation properties, possibly indicating that both degradation and repair took place in the knee articular cartilage and/or that fragments were rapidly lost from the tissue. This may follow from different surgical procedures, only the one used for the hip joint being extra-articular, or from the different anatomy and physiology of the hip joint and the knee joint.

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