Home About us Contact | |||
Healthy Rabbits (healthy + rabbits)
Selected AbstractsIn vivo study on the healing of bone defects treated with bone marrow stromal cells, platelet-rich plasma, and freeze-dried bone allografts, alone and in combinationJOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, Issue 5 2006D. Dallari Abstract The repair of confined trabecular bone defects in rabbits treated by autologous bone marrow stromal cells (BMSC), platelet-rich plasma (PRP), freeze-dried bone allografts (FDBA) alone and in combination (BMSC,+,PRP; FDBA,+,BMSC; FDBA,+,PRP; FDBA,+,PRP,+,BMSC) was compared. A critical size defect was created in the distal part of the femurs of 48 adult rabbits. Histology and histomorphometry were used in the evaluation of healing at 2, 4, and 12 weeks after surgery. The healing rate (%) was calculated by measuring the residual bone defect area. Architecture of the newly formed bone was compared with that of bone at the same distal femur area of healthy rabbits. The defect healing rate was higher in PRP,+,BMSC, FDBA,+,PRP, FDBA,+,BMSC, and FDBA,+,PRP,+,BMSC treatments, while lower values were achieved with PRP treatment at all experimental times. The highest bone-healing rate at 2 weeks was achieved with FDBA,+,PRP,+,BMSC treatment, which resulted significantly different from PRP (p,<,0.05) and BMSC (p,<,0.05) treatments. At 4 weeks, the bone-healing rate increased except for PRP treatment. Finally, the bone-healing rate of FDBA,+,PRP, FDBA,+,BMSC, and FDBA,+,PRP,+,BMSC was significantly higher than that of PRP at 12 weeks (p,<,0.05). At 12 weeks, significant differences still existed between PRP, BMSC, and FDBA groups and normal bone (p,<,0.05). These results showed that the combination of FDBA, BMSC and PRP permitted an acceleration in bone healing and bone remodeling processes. © 2006 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res [source] Methotrexate loaded poly(l -lactic acid) microspheres for intra-articular delivery of methotrexate to the jointJOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, Issue 4 2004Linda S. Liang Abstract A controlled release delivery system that localizes methotrexate (MTX) in the synovial joint is needed to treat inflammation in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The purpose of this work was to develop and characterize MTX loaded poly(l -lactic acid) (PLLA) microspheres and evaluate in vivo tolerability and MTX plasma concentrations following intra-articular injection into healthy rabbits. MTX loaded PLLA (2 kg/mole) microspheres were prepared using the solvent evaporation method and characterized in terms of size, molecular weight, thermal properties, and release rates into phosphate buffered saline (PBS) (pH 7.4) at 37°C. Biocompatibility was evaluated by observing the swelling of the joints of the rabbits and histological analysis following the injection of the microspheres. MTX concentrations in the plasma and urine samples of rabbits were evaluated by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). MTX loaded microspheres showed a rapid burst phase followed by a slow release phase. MTX loaded and control microspheres were biocompatible and plasma concentrations of MTX were tenfold higher in rabbits injected intra-articularly with free MTX than MTX microspheres. MTX microspheres may retain the drug in the joint by reducing clearance from the joint into the blood. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci 93: 943,956, 2004 [source] Pharmacokinetic,pharmacodynamic integration of danofloxacin after intravenous, intramuscular and subcutaneous administration to rabbitsJOURNAL OF VETERINARY PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS, Issue 1 2007E. FERNÁNDEZ-VARÓN The pharmacokinetics of danofloxacin was studied following intravenous (i.v.), intramuscular (i.m.) and subcutaneous (s.c.) administration of 6 mg/kg to healthy rabbits. Danofloxacin concentration were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography assay with fluorescence detection. Minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) assay of danofloxacin against 30 strains of Staphylococcus aureus from several European countries was performed in order to compute pharmacodynamic surrogate markers. The danofloxacin plasma concentration versus time data after i.v. administration could best be described by a two-compartment open model. The disposition of i.m. and subcutaneously administered danofloxacin was best described by a one-compartment model. The terminal half-life for i.v., i.m. and s.c. routes was 4.88, 6.70 and 8.20 h, respectively. Clearance value after i.v. dosing was 0.76 L/kg·h. After i.m. administration, the absolute bioavailability was mean (±SD) 102.34 ± 5.17% and the Cmax was 1.87 mg/L. After s.c. administration, the absolute bioavailability was mean (±SD) 96.44 ± 5.95% and the Cmax was 1.79 mg/L. Danofloxacin shows a favourable pharmacokinetics profile in rabbits reflected by parameters such as a long half-life and a high bioavailability. However, in consideration of the low AUC/MIC indices obtained, its use by i.m. and s.c. route against the S. aureus strains assayed in this study cannot be recommended given the risk for selection of first mutant subpopulations. [source] Chronic arthritis aggravates vascular lesions in rabbits with atherosclerosis: A novel model of atherosclerosis associated with chronic inflammationARTHRITIS & RHEUMATISM, Issue 9 2008Raquel Largo Objective To determine whether systemic inflammation induced by chronic antigen-induced arthritis (AIA) accelerates vascular lesions in rabbits with atherosclerosis. Methods Two models of atherosclerosis and chronic AIA were combined. Atherosclerosis was induced by coupling a hyperlipemic diet with an endothelial lesion at the femoral arteries, while chronic AIA was induced by ovalbumin injection. Markers in sera and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) as well as vessels and synovial membranes from the rabbits with the double phenotype (both chronic AIA and atherosclerosis) were compared with those from rabbits with each disease alone. Results Serum levels of interleukin-6, C-reactive protein, and prostaglandin E2 increased in rabbits with both chronic AIA and atherosclerosis as compared with healthy animals or animals with either chronic AIA alone or atherosclerosis alone. NF-,B binding and CCL2 and cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) expression were higher in PBMCs from rabbits with both chronic AIA and atherosclerosis than in PBMCs from healthy rabbits. The intima-media thickness ratio of femoral arteries was equally increased in rabbits with atherosclerosis alone and in rabbits with both chronic AIA and atherosclerosis, but the latter group showed a higher level of macrophage infiltration. Femoral CCL2 and COX-2 expression was increased in rabbits with both chronic AIA and atherosclerosis as compared with rabbits with atherosclerosis alone. In the aortas, vascular lesions were found in 27% of rabbits with atherosclerosis alone and in 60% of rabbits with both chronic AIA and atherosclerosis. Rabbits with both chronic AIA and atherosclerosis exhibited more severe synovitis and higher synovial expression of CCL2 than did rabbits with chronic AIA alone. Conclusion The onset of chronic AIA in animals with atherosclerosis resulted in the local and systemic up-regulation of mediators of tissue inflammation and plaque instability associated with a higher incidence of aortic lesions. This model could represent a novel approach to the study of inflammation-associated atherosclerosis. [source] |