Histological and Immunohistochemical Methods in Normal and Osteoarthritic Knee Cartilage of Rat and Rabbit Models: A Literature Review
Ana Sabucedo-Suárez, María Permuy, Fernando Muñoz, Mónica López-Peña

TL;DR
This paper reviews methods used to study knee cartilage in rat and rabbit models to understand osteoarthritis better.
Contribution
The study systematically reviews histological and immunohistochemical techniques used in rat and rabbit osteoarthritis models.
Findings
Hematoxylin–Eosin and Safranin O stains clearly differentiate healthy from osteoarthritic cartilage.
Immunohistochemistry shows decreased type II collagen and increased matrix metalloproteinases and caspase-3 in osteoarthritis.
Histology is useful for cartilage structure evaluation, while immunohistochemistry reveals processes like apoptosis and collagen degradation.
Abstract
The tissue covering the bones in synovial joints is called articular cartilage. Chondrocytes produce and maintain the extracellular matrix and, based on their shape and the orientation of the collagen fibers, articular cartilage is separated into four histological zones: superficial, middle, deep, and calcified zones. Osteoarthritis is a degenerative joint disorder in which mechanical, biochemical, and inflammatory factors contribute to the disruption of the balance between extracellular matrix synthesis and degradation. This article aims to review the literature published to date by identifying the techniques most used in immunohistochemistry and histology for the detection and grading of knee osteoarthritis in rabbit/rat models. A systematic review was carried out using databases to find publications that assessed osteoarthritis in rabbit/rat knee models using histological and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOsteoarthritis Treatment and Mechanisms · Silk-based biomaterials and applications · Knee injuries and reconstruction techniques
