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Is arthritis an inevitable part of growing older and what are the ways to prevent it?
Channel News Asia ^ | 5/7

Posted on 05/06/2023 8:09:19 PM PDT by nickcarraway

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BKMK


61 posted on 05/08/2023 6:12:36 PM PDT by Faith65 (Isaiah 40:31 )
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To: Blennos

Several studies seem to confirm the efficacy of niacinamide for the treatment and prevention of osteoarthritis. Here below is the synopsis of one of them.

–-——————

Fifty years ago, Kaufman reported that high-dose niacinamide was beneficial in osteoarthritis (OA) and rheumatoid arthritis. A recent double-blind study confirms the efficacy of niacinamide in OA. It may be feasible to interpret this finding in the context of evidence that synovium-generated interleukin-1 (IL-1), by inducing nitric oxide (NO) synthase and thereby inhibiting chondrocyte synthesis of aggrecan and type II collagen, is crucial to the pathogenesis of OA. Niacinamide and other inhibitors of ADP-ribosylation have been shown to suppress cytokine-mediated induction of NO synthase in a number of types of cells; it is therefore reasonable to speculate that niacinamide will have a comparable effect in IL-1-exposed chondrocytes, blunting the anti-anabolic impact of IL-1. The chondroprotective antibiotic doxycycline may have a similar mechanism of action. Other nutrients reported to be useful in OA may likewise intervene in the activity or synthesis of IL-1. Supplemental glucosamine can be expected to stimulate synovial synthesis of hyaluronic acid; hyaluronic acid suppresses the anti-catabolic effect of IL-1 in chondrocyte cell cultures, and has documented therapeutic efficacy when injected intra-articularly. S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), another proven therapy for OA, upregulates the proteoglycan synthesis of chondrocytes, perhaps because it functions physiologically as a signal of sulfur availability. IL-1 is likely to decrease SAM levels in chondrocytes; supplemental SAM may compensate for this deficit. Adequate selenium nutrition may down-regulate cytokine signaling, and ample intakes of fish oil can be expected to decrease synovial IL-1 production; these nutrients should receive further evaluation in OA. These considerations suggest that non-toxic nutritional regimens, by intervening at multiple points in the signal transduction pathways that promote the synthesis and mediate the activity of IL-1, may provide a substantially superior alternative to NSAIDs (merely palliative and often dangerously toxic) in the treatment and perhaps prevention of OA.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10608273/


62 posted on 05/09/2023 3:33:14 PM PDT by Blennos
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To: nickcarraway

Another bump.


63 posted on 05/17/2023 5:25:00 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (“There is no good government at all & none possible.”--Mark Twain)
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To: COSIllinois

bump

      

64 posted on 05/17/2023 6:20:39 PM PDT by Songcraft
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