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Query: UMLS:C0003873 (
rheumatoid arthritis
)
53,068
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A new model employing latex of papaya as an inflammagen has been developed for testing anti-inflammatory activity. The latex (exudate) was harvested from the unripe papaya fruit, which had been dried under vacuum. The latex was then suspended in 0.05 M sodium acetate buffer. This suspension when injected in rat hind paw produced concentration-dependent inflammation. Of the 0.25% of this suspension, 0.1 ml was found ideal for evaluating anti-inflammatory activity of test drugs. This concentration produced 70%-100% inflammation lasting for about 5 hr with a maximum effect at h 3. The test drugs employed were prednisolone, aspirin, indomethacin, phenylbutazone, ibuprofen, piroxicam, chloroquine, levamisole, and a mixture of boswellic acids. For comparison, these drugs were also tested against carrageenan-induced inflammation. All the test drugs--steroidal, aspirin, and non-aspirin-like--showed anti-inflammatory activity against latex-induced inflammation. The activity of chloroquine, levamisole, and boswellic acids was significantly more against latex as compared with that of the carrageenan model. The inflammation caused by latex may be attributed to both its hydrolytic enzymes--papain and
chymopapain
--and glutathione, the activator of these enzymes. These enzymes seem to act like lysosomal enzymes that are released in inflammatory disease processes which mediate inflammation by stimulating the synthesis of prostaglandins. The papaya latex-induced inflammation model appears to be a sensitive, broad-based, and relevant one likely to prove useful for discovering new and effective drugs against inflammation and
rheumatoid arthritis
.
...
PMID:A sensitive and relevant model for evaluating anti-inflammatory activity-papaya latex-induced rat paw inflammation. 139 54
Hyaluronan (HA) retention inside the synovial cavity of joints serves diverse protective roles. We tested the hypothesis that HA retention is mediated by the network of extracellular matrix proteins in the synovial lining. Cannulated rabbit knee joints were infused with HA solution with or without pretreatment by
chymopapain
, a collagen-sparing protease. Trans-synovial fluid escape rate was measured and, after a period of trans-synovial filtration, samples of intra-articular fluid and subsynovial fluid were analysed for HA to assess its trans-synovial ultrafiltration. In control joints, HA ultrafiltration was confirmed by postfiltration increases in intra-articular HA concentration (259 +/- 17% of infused concentration) and reduced subsynovial concentration (30 +/- 8%; n = 11). The proportion of HA molecules reflected by the synovium was 57-75%. Chymopapain treatment increased the hydraulic permeability of the synovial lining approximately 13-fold, almost abolished the trans-synovial difference in HA concentration and reduced the HA reflected fraction to 3-7% (n = 6; P < 0.001, ANOVA). Structural studies confirmed that
chymopapain
treatment depleted the matrix of proteoglycans but preserved its collagen. The findings thus demonstrate that HA ultrafiltration and synovial hydraulic permeability are determined by the network of non-collagen, extracellular matrix proteins. This may be important clinically, since protease activity is raised in
rheumatoid arthritis
, as are HA and fluid escape.
...
PMID:Interstitial matrix proteins determine hyaluronan reflection and fluid retention in rabbit joints: effect of protease. 1700 73