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Matthew J. Flick, Christine M. LaJeunesse, Kathryn E. Talmage, David P. Witte, Joseph S. Palumbo, Malinda D. Pinkerton, Sherry Thornton, Jay L. Degen
Published in Volume 117, Issue 11
J Clin Invest. 2007; 117(11):3224–3235 doi:10.1172/JCI30134
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Figure 10
Fibrinogen deficiency has no effect on TNF-α–driven inflammatory joint disease.

(A and B) Scatter plot of arthritic index scores of paws from 8-week-old (A) and 10-week-old (B) Fib+ and Fib mice overexpressing human TNF-α. Bars indicate the median scores for each genotype. (C) Knee joint histology of representative sections taken from 10-week-old Fib+ and Fib mice overexpressing human TNF-α show identical joint destruction characterized by inflammatory cell infiltrate, robust synovial hyperplasia, articular cartilage erosion, and significant loss of bone. Quantitative evaluation of knee joint sections indicated a similar level of disease severity between TNF-α–overexpressing Fib+ and Fib mice. (D) Scatter plot of composite histopathology index score of knee joint sections; bars indicate median values (Fib+, 10.5; Fib, 11.5; P = 0.09, Mann-Whitney U test). (E) Mean scores for histopathology criteria of knee joint sections showed no significant difference for any individual parameter.