Press Release
For more information, visit: http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis
Amy Molnar
(201) 748-8844/8852 (fax)
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Evidence of a New Hereditary Joint Disorder
A Family History Uncovers Syndrome Marked by Cartilage Prone to “Bubbling” and
Peeling Away from the Bone
While characteristic of osteoarthritis (OA), a degenerative joint disease
that affects some 20 million Americans, cartilage erosion and bone abnormalities
are also associated with many rare hereditary conditions. In the October 2005
issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism ( http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis),
researchers at Case Western Reserve University and the University of California,
San Diego, report clinical and laboratory findings regarding a family with
a highly unusual and extremely destructive syndrome, marked by fragile articular
cartilage with a tendency to “bubble” and peel away from the underlying bone.
A 49-year-old male, “MM1” had endured joint pain, invasive treatment, and
frustration for most of his life. At age 3, he was labeled with “abnormal bone
structure” and subjected to immobilization of both legs. At age 10, he began
to complain of knee and hip pain. By age 13, he had lost significant hip mobility
and his left leg was shorter than his right. At age 16, he underwent a surgery
to separate the hip and insert a plate. Eventually, in his 40s, he had his
hip replaced completely. Over the years, MM1 was misdiagnosed with various
disorders, including Osgood-Schlatter disease, Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease,
and spondylo-epiphyseal dysplasia. But what made his case clinically compelling
was his children. MM1 is the father of 3 – 2 daughters, 1 son – all of whom
suffered similar symptoms, beginning in the preteen years and continuing into
adulthood. All 3 children have had multiple arthroscopic procedures – on the
knees, hips, and shoulders – for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes. Both
daughters have had total hip replacement surgery. To the research team, this
suggested a terribly destructive joint disease with a strong hereditary component.
To gain a clearer sense of this syndrome's distinctive signs, the researchers
examined blood samples of both the affected family members and unaffected relatives – MM1's
parents and 4 siblings – for single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the
chromosome 2 region which are known to influence bone and cartilage development.
Two SNPs were identified in all 4 affected family members. Yet, because the
same SNPs were also present in MM1's unaffected mother and 2 of 4 of his unaffected
siblings, their role in the condition was inconclusive.
The researchers also analyzed radiographic and arthroscopic findings in all
4 of the affected family members. Radiographs showed degenerative changes in
the hips of all affected. Of particular interest, however, was the unusual
arthroscopic evidence.
In all 4 of the affected family members, researchers observed excessive tissue
fluid and large loose bodies. What's more, they found something common, and
bizarre, about the nature of each subject's cartilage: its vulnerability to “bubbling” and
peeling off in layers to expose bone, at a very early age. In OA, cartilage—the
body's natural shock absorber—gradually erodes from the toll of inflammation.
The increased stress on the bones often leads to joint damage. In this novel
syndrome, cartilage de-bonds and strips away at a radical rate, leaving bones
completely unprotected and joints exceptionally susceptible to shattering.
“Further studies elucidating the mechanisms leading to the delamination of
cartilage from bone in this family,” notes Dr. Moskowitz, Senior Study Investigator, “may
provide insights into cartilage-bone interaction in other forms of joint degeneration.”
# # #
Article: “A Newly Described Hereditary Cartilage Debonding Syndrome,” D.
Holderbaum, T. Malvitz, C.J. Ciesielski, D. Carson, M.P. Corr, and R.W. Moskowitz, Arthritis & Rheumatism ,
October 2005; 52:10; pp. 3300-3304.