Literature DB >> 14499292

Fluid pressure gradients, arising from oscillations in intramedullary pressure, is correlated with the formation of bone and inhibition of intracortical porosity.

Yi Xian Qin1, Tamara Kaplan, Anita Saldanha, Clinton Rubin.   

Abstract

Fluid flow that arises from the functional loading of bone tissue has been proposed to be a critical regulator of skeletal mass and morphology. To test this hypothesis, the bone adaptive response to a physiological fluid stimulus, driven by low magnitude, high frequency oscillations of intramedullary pressure (ImP), were examined, in which fluid pressures were achieved without deforming the bone tissue. The ulnae of adult turkeys were functionally isolated via transverse epiphyseal osteotomies, and the adaptive response to four weeks of disuse (n=5) was compared to disuse plus 10 min per day of a physiological sinusoidal fluid pressure signal (60 mmHg, 20Hz). Disuse alone resulted in significant bone loss (5.7+/-1.9%, p< or =0.05), achieved by thinning the cortex via endosteal resorption and an increase in intracortical porosity. By also subjecting bone to oscillatory fluid flow, a significant increase in bone mass at the mid-diaphysis (18.3+/-7.6%, p<0.05), was achieved by both periosteal and endosteal new bone formation. The spatial distribution of the transcortical fluid pressure gradients (inverted Delta P(r)), a parameter closely related to fluid velocity and fluid shear stress, was quantified in 12 equal sectors across a section at the mid-diaphyses. A strong correlation was found between the inverted Delta P(r) and total new bone formation (r=0.75, p=0.01); and an inverse correlation (r=-0.75, p=0.01) observed between inverted Delta P(r) and the area of increased intracortical porosity, indicating that fluid flow signals were necessary to maintain bone mass and/or inhibit bone loss against the challenge of disuse. By generating this fluid flow in the absence of matrix strain, these data suggest that anabolic fluid movement plays a regulatory role in the modeling and remodeling process. While ImP increases uniformly in the marrow cavity, the distinct parameters of fluid flow vary substantially due to the geometry and ultrastructure of bone, which ultimately defines the spatial non-uniformity of the adaptive process.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14499292     DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9290(03)00127-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomech        ISSN: 0021-9290            Impact factor:   2.712


  62 in total

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8.  Novel early response genes in osteoblasts exposed to dynamic fluid flow.

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9.  Dynamic fluid flow induced mechanobiological modulation of in situ osteocyte calcium oscillations.

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10.  Adipogenesis is inhibited by brief, daily exposure to high-frequency, extremely low-magnitude mechanical signals.

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