Guest guest Posted October 17, 2005 Report Share Posted October 17, 2005 Evidence emerging of a new hereditary joint disorder  Oct 17, 2005  Gandey Cleveland, OH - Researchers are unveiling what they say is the first evidence of a new hereditary cartilage debonding syndrome [1]. Investigators in the October 2005 issue of Arthritis and Rheumatism outline this destructive joint disorder, which is characterized by cartilage prone to bubbling and peeling away from the bone. " We report clinical and laboratory findings of a family with a previously undescribed hereditary cartilage debonding syndrome, " comment the researchers, led by Dr Holderbaum (Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH).  This syndrome began as early as the first decade of life and is characterized by friability of articular cartilage with debonding of cartilage from subchondral bone.  The investigators assessed a family with symptoms of the highly unusual and damaging condition. Those affected had multiple shoulder, hip, and knee arthropathies that began in the preteen years and continued into adulthood. Various diagnoses had been suggested, including spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia and Osgood-Schlatter disease. " In affected family members, this syndrome began as early as the first decade of life and is characterized by friability of articular cartilage with debonding of cartilage from subchondral bone, " Holderbaum and colleagues explain. " The affected family members underwent multiple arthroscopic procedures for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes, and three of four subjects underwent total joint replacement during the third to sixth decades of life. " Could it be . . . Spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia? Multiple epiphyseal dysplasia? Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease? Osgood-Schlatter disease?  Holderbaum and his team collected blood samples from the affected proband father, his three affected children, and healthy family members. They examined the samples for single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the chromosome 2 region, including the Frizzled-related protein gene and a soluble Wnt protein-signaling antagonist that influences bone and cartilage development.  The clinical findings reported here represent a newly defined clinical syndrome characterized by marked cartilage friability and osteochondral debonding.  The investigators found that each of the affected family members had clear similarities, including effusions, large loose bodies, and bubbling and delamination of the cartilage with exposure of subchondral bone. Those affected also had radiographic changes in the hip, including femoral-head flattening and secondary degenerative arthritis. They also showed abnormalities in the physical properties of the cartilage that were apparent on arthroscopic examination. Holderbaum and colleagues identified two SNPs in the family members with symptoms of disease. Interestingly, the researchers point out, these were also present in certain unaffected relatives, including the proband's mother and two of his four unaffected siblings. " Because unaffected family members also have this change in presumptive amino-acid sequence, it is clear that this mutation is, in and of itself, insufficient to cause the phenotype, " they write. " Whether the mutation plays a role in what could be a polygenic trait responsible for the phenotype remains to be seen. " They conclude that these findings represent a newly defined clinical syndrome characterized by marked cartilage friability and osteochondral debonding. They call for additional studies elucidating the mechanism leading to the delamination of cartilage from bone, which may provide insight into cartilage-bone interaction in other forms of joint degeneration. Source  Holderbaum D, Malvitz T, Ciesielski CJ, et al. A newly described hereditary cartilage debonding syndrome. Arthritis Rheum 2005; 52:3300-3304. http://www.jointandbone.org/viewArticle.do?primaryKey=577383 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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