Volume 33, Issue 1 pp. 87-90
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Substance p and arthritis: analysis of plasma and synovial fluid levels

K. Wayne Marshall Md, Frcs(C)

Corresponding Author

K. Wayne Marshall Md, Frcs(C)

Lecturer in Surgery and MRC Research Fellow

Toronto Hospital Arthritis Centre, Divisions of Orthopaedics and Rheumatology and the Playfair Neuroscience Unit, Toronto Western Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

1–231 Fell Pavilion, Toronto Hospital Arthritis Centre, Toronto Western Hospital, 399 Bathurst Street, Toronto, Ontario M5T 2S8, CanadaSearch for more papers by this author
Basil Chiu PhD

Basil Chiu PhD

Research Associate

Toronto Hospital Arthritis Centre, Divisions of Orthopaedics and Rheumatology and the Playfair Neuroscience Unit, Toronto Western Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

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Robert D. Inman Md, Frcp(C), Facp

Robert D. Inman Md, Frcp(C), Facp

Associate Professor of Medicine and Immunology

Toronto Hospital Arthritis Centre, Divisions of Orthopaedics and Rheumatology and the Playfair Neuroscience Unit, Toronto Western Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

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First published: January 1990
Citations: 134

Abstract

The uncadecapeptide substance P (SP), which is localized in peripheral and central terminals of afferent nerve fibers with polymodal nociceptors, has recently been implicated as having a neurogenic, inflammatory role in experimental arthritis. We used a radioimmunoassay to measure SP levels in plasma and synovial fluid samples from patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), osteoarthritis (OA), Reiter's syndrome (RS), and posttraumatic arthritis, as well as in plasma samples from 13 normal subjects. Plasma SP levels in RS patients exceeded levels in RA and OA patients, which in turn exceeded levels in posttrauma patients and in normal subjects. Synovial fluid SP levels exceeded respective plasma levels for all groups, except in RS patients, in whom the plasma level was not significantly different from that in synovial fluid. SP levels in synovial fluid of RA, OA, and RS patients did not differ significantly from each other, but the level in posttrauma patients was higher than in all other groups (P > 0.005). These studies demonstrate localized intraarticular SP release, and significant plasma/synovial fluid SP concentration gradients in several forms of arthritis.

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