Refining the adjuvant-induced rat model of monoarthritis by optimizing the induction volume and injection site (2025)
Berke, M. S., Hansen, C. P., Kromann, S. et al.
Abstract
Arthritis is a highly prevalent and disabling condition characterized by pathological joint-damage, clinical symptoms of pain and loss of normal joint function. Monoarthritis can be modelled in rodents via intraarticular injection of Complete Freund’s Adjuvant (CFA), inducing both joint inflammation and pain-like behaviours. This study aimed to compare the outcome of different injection-volumes and joint-locations, to refine the model’s use and to improve its validity. Male and female Sprague Dawley rats were injected with CFA into the ankle (10, 20 or 50 µl) or knee joint (10, 50 or 100 µl), and assessed on dynamic weight bearing, locomotor activity, depressive- and anxiety-like behaviours, histology, and various welfare and model-specific parameters. Induction of monoarthritis resulted in relatively similar behavioural profiles regardless of the injected joint. The animals were highly affected in the acute phase, while less in the chronic phase. Greater volumes of CFA were associated with more profound behavioural changes and joint swelling. The largest volumes induced a pronounced local spread of inflammation to adjacent joints, which was reduced with intermediate volumes without attenuating the model validity. Reducing induction volumes to 20 and 50 µl CFA for ankle and knee injections, respectively, appears to be valuable refinement of these models.
Published
2025
Citation
Berke, M. S., Hansen, C. P., Kromann, S. et al. 2025. Refining the adjuvant-induced rat model of monoarthritis by optimizing the induction volume and injection site. Scientific Reports 15(1), 40281.
Full Article
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-24129-x