## Abstract The effect of pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMFs) on bone loss associated with disuse was investigated by applying 1.5 Hz repetitions of 30 ms bursts of asymmetric pulses, varying from +2.5 to β135 mV, to bones deprived of their normal functional loading. The proximal portion of one f
Uniformity of resorptive bone loss induced by disuse
β Scribed by Ted S. Gross; Clinton T. Rubin
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 772 KB
- Volume
- 13
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0736-0266
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Strains induced in the skeleton by functional activity are critical to the homeostasis of bone tissue. An in vivo model of disues osteopenia was used to examine whether the removal of these regulatory stimuli induces a uniform loss of crotical bone through the whole organ or whether the loss of bone is focused at specific sites of the cortex. The right radii of five adult male turkeys were isolated from their normal functional loading for 8 weeks. The corresponding left radius from each animal served as an intact contralateral control. An additional group of five turkeys was used as timeβzero controls to assess the initial areal symmetry of the left and right radii. Areal properties were assessed at three sites at equal intervals spanning the middle 3 cm of the diaphysis. Adaptation was determined for each cross section as a whole, as well as specifically by site by division of each cross section into 12 equal angle sectors. The average across all experimental sections after 8 weeks of disuse was 12.1 Β± 1.9% (Β± SE) loss of bone mass. The change in mean crossβsectional area varied little between the three diaphyseal sites (β10.2 Β± 3.3%, β13.5 Β± 3.8%, and β12.6 Β± 4.0%) and occurred primarily (84%) by uniform expansion of the endosteal envelope. However, elevated intracortical porosity following 8 weeks of disuse was highly nonuniform, with 58% of the increased porosity preferentially located in the ventral/caudal cortex (representing only 25% of the cortical area). From these data, it is concluded that bone responds to the removal of functional stimuli with a uniform, organβwide loss of mass, yet intracortical remodeling occurs preferentially within specific areas of the cortex. The lack of spatial coupling between these events suggests that the two processes may be governed by distinct physiologic criteria.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract We investigated whether intraosseous injection of prostaglandin E~2~ would preserve tibial bone mass in the skeletally unloaded limb of a large animal model. Skeletal unloading of one rear limb was produced by unilateral Achilles tenectomy in the goat. Prostaglandin E~2~ was injected at
Objective. Inhibitors of prostaglandin production, such as nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and pharmacologic nitric oxide (NO) donors, such as organic nitrates, have been suggested to protect against bone loss in both humans and experimental animals. Recently, a new class of nitrosylat
In this study, a rat calvaria/macrophage co-culture model was used to study the effects of various agents upon bone resorption induced by macrophage exposure to bone cement particles. The experimental group consisted of calvaria bone disks set in tissue culture medium on stainless-steel platforms in