Autologous platelet-rich plasma effects on Staphylococcus aureus–induced chondrocyte death in an in vitro bovine septic arthritis model
Autor: | Gregory A. Ballash, Sara L. Cole, Sushmitha S. Durgam, Joseph W. Lozier, Zarah A. Belacic, Andrew J. Niehaus, Andrew J.T. Muir |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2022 |
Předmět: |
Cartilage
Articular Arthritis Infectious Staphylococcus aureus General Veterinary Platelet-Rich Plasma Chemistry Cattle Diseases General Medicine medicine.disease Chondrocyte In vitro Andrology Glycosaminoglycan Chondrocytes medicine.anatomical_structure In vivo medicine Animals Synovial fluid Cattle Female Septic arthritis Viability assay Explant culture |
Zdroj: | American Journal of Veterinary Research. 83:119-126 |
ISSN: | 0002-9645 |
Popis: | OBJECTIVE To investigate the chondroprotective effects of autologous platelet-rich plasma (PRP), ampicillin-sulbactam (AmpS), or PRP combined with AmpS (PRP+AmpS) in an in vitro chondrocyte explant model of bovine Staphylococcus aureus–induced septic arthritis. SAMPLE Autologous PRP and cartilage explants obtained from 6 healthy, adult, nonlactating Jersey-crossbred cows. ProcedureS Autologous PRP was prepared prior to euthanasia using an optimized double centrifugation protocol. Cartilage explants collected from grossly normal stifle joints were incubated in synovial fluid (SF) alone, S aureus–inoculated SF (SA), or SA supplemented with PRP (25% culture medium volume), AmpS (2 mg/mL), or both PRP (25% culture medium volume) and AmpS (2 mg/mL; PRP+AmpS) for 24 hours. The metabolic activity, percentage of dead cells, and glycosaminoglycan content of cartilage explants were measured with a resazurin-based assay, live-dead cell staining, and dimethylmethylene blue assay, respectively. Treatment effects were assessed relative to the findings for cartilage explants incubated in SF alone. RESULTS Application of PRP, AmpS, and PRP+AmpS treatments significantly reduced S aureus–induced chondrocyte death (ie, increased metabolic activity and cell viability staining) in cartilage explants, compared with untreated controls. There were no significant differences in chondrocyte death among explants treated with PRP, AmpS, or PRP+AmpS. CLINICAL RELEVANCE In this in vitro explant model of S aureus–induced septic arthritis, PRP, AmpS, and PRP+AmpS treatments mitigated chondrocyte death. Additional work to confirm the efficacy of PRP with bacteria commonly associated with clinical septic arthritis in cattle as well as in vivo evaluation is warranted. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |