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Journal Article

Citation

Jiménez G, López-Ruiz E, Antich C, Chocarro-Wrona C, Marchal JA. Adv. Exp. Med. Biol. 2018; 1059: 331-350.

Affiliation

Excellence Research Unit "Modeling Nature" (MNat), University of Granada, Granada, Spain. jmarchal@ugr.es.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/978-3-319-76735-2_15

PMID

29736581

Abstract

Osteochondral (OC) lesions are a major cause of chronic musculoskeletal pain and functional disability, which reduces the quality of life of the patients and entails high costs to the society. Currently, there are no effective treatments, so in vitro and in vivo disease models are critically important to obtain knowledge about the causes and to develop effective treatments for OC injuries. In vitro models are essential to clarify the causes of the disease and the subsequent design of the first barrier to test potential therapeutics. On the other hand, in vivo models are anatomically more similar to humans allowing to reproduce the pattern and progression of the lesion in a controlled scene and offering the opportunity to study the symptoms and responses to new treatments. Moreover, in vivo models are the most suitable preclinical model, being a fundamental and a mandatory step to ensure the successful transfer to clinical trials. Both in vitro and in vitro models have a number of advantages and limitation, and the choice of the most appropriate model for each study depends on many factors, such as the purpose of the study, handling or the ease to obtain, and cost, among others. In this chapter, we present the main in vitro and in vivo OC disease models that have been used over the years in the study of origin, progress, and treatment approaches of OC defects.


Language: en

Keywords

Disease models; In vitro models; In vivo models; Osteoarthritis; Osteochondral defects

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