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Published in: Calcified Tissue International 5/2010

01-05-2010

Mechanical Stimulation and Intermittent Parathyroid Hormone Treatment Induce Disproportional Osteogenic, Geometric, and Biomechanical Effects in Growing Mouse Bone

Authors: Maureen E. McAteer, Paul J. Niziolek, Shana N. Ellis, Daniel L. Alge, Alexander G. Robling

Published in: Calcified Tissue International | Issue 5/2010

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Abstract

Mechanical loading and intermittent parathyroid (iPTH) treatment are both osteoanabolic stimuli and are regulated by partially overlapping cellular signaling pathways. iPTH has been shown clinically to be effective in increasing bone mass and reducing fracture risk. Likewise, mechanical stimulation can significantly enhance bone apposition and prevent bone loss, but its clinical effects on fracture susceptibility are less certain. Many of the osteogenic effects of iPTH are localized to biomechanically suboptimal bone surfaces, whereas mechanical loading directs new bone formation to high-stress areas and not to strain-neutral areas. These differences in localization in new tissue, resulting from load-induced versus iPTH-induced bone accumulation, should affect the relation between bone mass and bone strength, or “tissue economy.” We investigated the changes in bone mass and strength induced by 6 weeks of mechanical loading and compared them to changes induced by 6 weeks of iPTH treatment. Loading and iPTH both increased ulnar bone accrual, as measured by bone mineral density and content, and fluorochrome-derived bone formation. iPTH induced a significantly greater increase in bone mass than loading, but ulnar bone strength was increased approximately the same amount by both treatments. Mechanical loading during growth can spatially optimize new bone formation to improve structural integrity with a minimal increase in mass, thereby increasing tissue economy, i.e., the amount of strength returned per unit bone mass added. Furthermore, exercise studies in which only small changes in bone mass are detected might be more beneficial to bone health and fracture resistance than has commonly been presumed.
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Metadata
Title
Mechanical Stimulation and Intermittent Parathyroid Hormone Treatment Induce Disproportional Osteogenic, Geometric, and Biomechanical Effects in Growing Mouse Bone
Authors
Maureen E. McAteer
Paul J. Niziolek
Shana N. Ellis
Daniel L. Alge
Alexander G. Robling
Publication date
01-05-2010
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Calcified Tissue International / Issue 5/2010
Print ISSN: 0171-967X
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0827
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00223-010-9348-1

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