Skip to main content
Clinical Medicine logoLink to Clinical Medicine
. 2003 Jul 1;3(4):361–366. doi: 10.7861/clinmedicine.3-4-361

Why does chronic inflammatory joint disease persist?

Christopher D Buckley 1
PMCID: PMC5351954  PMID: 12938753

Abstract

Inflammation is a beneficial host response to tissue damage. Most episodes of inflammation resolve spontaneously and do not persist. However, in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), as in a number of other chronic inflammatory diseases, the inflammatory response persists and a stable inflammatory infiltrate accumulates in the joint. What drives this persistence and the relative contribution of infiltrating leucocytes and stromal cells such as fibroblasts to the stability of the inflammatory process are the subject of this article.

Fibroblasts play an important role in defining the disordered synovial microenvironment in RA. Through their production of a variety of cytokines and constitutive chemokines they directly alter the behaviour of infiltrating leucocytes, leading to their inappropriate survival and retention. These findings suggest that stromal cells such as fibroblasts play an important role in the switch from acute resolving to chronic persistent arthritis by allowing lymphocytes to accumulate in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Key Words: chemokine, chronic inflammation, fibroblast, lymphocyte, rheumatoid arthritis

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (497.6 KB).


Articles from Clinical Medicine are provided here courtesy of Royal College of Physicians

RESOURCES