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SYNOVIAL FLUID

'Synovial fluid' is a thick, stringy fluid found in the cavities of synovial joints. With its egg-like consistency (''synovial'' comes from Latin for "egg"), synovial fluid reduces friction between the articular cartilage and other tissues in joints to lubricate and cushion them during movement.

Contents
Overview
Composition
Health and disease
Collection
Classification
Pathology
Joints Cracking
Additional images
External links and references

Overview


The inner membrane of synovial joints is called the synovial membrane, which secretes synovial fluid into the joint cavity. This fluid forms a thin layer (approximately 50 micrometres) at the surface of cartilage, but also seeps into microcavities and irregularities in the articular cartilage surface, filling any empty space [1]. The fluid within articular cartilage effectively serves as a synovial fluid reserve. During normal movements, the synovial fluid held within the cartilage is squeezed out mechanically (so-called ''weeping lubrication'') to maintain a layer of fluid on the cartilage surface.

Composition


Normal synovial fluid contains 3-4 mg/ml hyaluronan (hyaluronic acid), a polymer of disaccharides composed of D-glucuronic acid and D-N-acetylglucosamine joined by alternating beta-1,4 and beta-1,3 glycosidic bonds [2]. Hyaluronan is synthesized by the synovial membrane and secreted into the joint cavity to increase the viscosity and elasticity of articular cartilages and lubricate the surfaces between synovium and cartilage.[3]
Synovial fluid also contains lubricin secreted by synovial cells. It is chiefly responsible for so-called boundary-layer lubrication, which reduces friction between opposing surfaces of cartilage. There is also some evidence that it helps regulate synovial cell growth.[4]

Health and disease


Collection

Synovial fluid can be collected by syringe in a procedure termed arthrocentesis, also known as joint aspiration.
Classification

Synovial fluid can be classified into normal, noninflammatory, inflammatory, septic, and hemorrhagic:
Classification of synovial fluid in an adult knee joint
Normal Noninflammatory Inflammatory Septic Hemorrhagic
Volume (ml) | >3.5 >3.5 >3.5 >3.5
Viscosity High High Low Mixed High
Clarity Clear Clear Cloudy Opaque Mixed
Color Colorless/straw Straw/yellow Yellow Mixed Red
WBC/mm3 | 200-2,000 || 2,000-75,000 || >100,000 Same as blood
Polys (%) | <25 || >50 >75 Same as blood
Gram stain Negative Negative Negative Often positive Negative

Pathology

Many synovial fluid types are associated with specific diagnoses [5] [6]:

★ Noninflammatory (Group I)


Osteoarthritis, degenerative joint disease


★ Trauma


Rheumatic fever


★ Chronic gout or pseudogout


Scleroderma


Polymyositis


Systemic lupus erythematosus


Erythema nodosum


Neuropathic arthropathy (with possible hemorrhage)


Sickle-cell disease


Hemochromatosis


Acromegaly


Amyloidosis

★ Inflammatory (Group II)


Rheumatoid arthritis


Reiter's syndrome


Psoriatic arthritis


★ Acute rheumatic fever


★ Acute gout or pseuodgout


★ Scleroderma


★ Polymyositis


★ Systemic lupus erythematosus


Ankylosing spondylitis


★ Inflammatory bowel disease arthritis


Infection (viral, fungal, bacterial) including Lyme disease


★ Acute crystal synovitis

★ Septic (Group III)


Pyogenic bacterial infection


Septic arthritis

★ Hemorrhagic


★ Trauma


Tumors


Hemophilia/coagulopathy


Scurvy


Ehlers-Danlos syndrome


★ Neuropathic arthropathy
Joints Cracking

When two parts forming a joint are pulled away from each other, the joint capsule increases in volume but the synovial fluid in the capsule no longer fills it all. Gases dissolved in the fluid quickly fill the empty space causing a sharp cracking sound. [7]. The general term for this is cavitation.

Additional images



External links and references


1. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~regfjxe/NORMALJOINT.htm
2. http://www.glycoforum.gr.jp/science/hyaluronan/HA01/HA01E.html
3. http://www.orthop.washington.edu/arthritis/general/joints/04
4. http://arthritis-research.com/content/5/S3/5
5. http://www.fpnotebook.com/RHE64.htm
6. http://www.rheumatology.org/publications/primarycare/number6/hrh0033698.asp?aud=mem
7. http://health.howstuffworks.com/question437.htm


★ Warman W. "Delineating biologic pathways involved in skeletal growth and homeostasis through the study of rare Mendelian diseases that affect bones and joints." ''Arthritis Res. Ther.'' 2003, 5(Suppl 3):5 [1]

Hyaluronan: structure and properties

Synovial fluid analysis, from the American College of Rheumatology



★ - white blood cell count

Normal joint structure, from University College London

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