Literature DB >> 16198164

Non-invasive axial loading of mouse tibiae increases cortical bone formation and modifies trabecular organization: a new model to study cortical and cancellous compartments in a single loaded element.

Roberto L De Souza1, Maiko Matsuura, Felix Eckstein, Simon C F Rawlinson, Lance E Lanyon, Andrew A Pitsillides.   

Abstract

Systematic study of bones' responses to loading requires simple non-invasive models in appropriate experimental animals where the applied load is controllable and the changes in bone quantifiable. Herein, we validate a model for applying axial loads, non-invasively to murine tibiae. This allows the effects of mechanical loading in both cancellous and cortical bone to be determined within a single bone in which genetic, neuronal and functional influences can also be readily manipulated. Using female C57Bl/J6 mice, peak strains at the tibial mid-shaft were measured during walking (<300 micro epsilon tension) and jumping (<600 micro epsilon compression) with single longitudinally oriented strain gauges attached to the bone's lateral and medial surfaces. Identically positioned gauges were also used to determine, for calibration, the strains engendered by external applied compressive tibial loading between the flexed knee and ankle ex vivo. Applied loads between 5 and 13 N produced strains of 1150-2000 micro epsilon on the lateral surface, and in vivo repetitions of these loads on alternate days for 2 weeks produced significant load magnitude-related increases in cortical bone formation that were similar in mice at 8, 12 and 20 weeks of age. Micro-CT scans showed that loading significantly increases trabecular bone volume in 8 week old mice, but modifies trabecular organization with decreases in trabecular bone volume in 12 and 20 week old mice. This model for loading the tibia has several advantages over other approaches, including scope to study the effects of loading in cancellous as well as cortical bone, against a background of either disuse or of treatment with osteotropic agents within a single bone in normal, mutant and transgenic mice.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16198164     DOI: 10.1016/j.bone.2005.07.022

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bone        ISSN: 1873-2763            Impact factor:   4.398


  155 in total

Review 1.  Early effects of embryonic movement: 'a shot out of the dark'.

Authors:  Andrew A Pitsillides
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2006-04       Impact factor: 2.610

2.  In vivo assessment of the effect of controlled high- and low-frequency mechanical loading on peri-implant bone healing.

Authors:  Xiaolei Zhang; Katleen Vandamme; Antonia Torcasio; Toru Ogawa; G Harry van Lenthe; Ignace Naert; Joke Duyck
Journal:  J R Soc Interface       Date:  2012-01-25       Impact factor: 4.118

3.  Design and analysis of a novel mechanical loading machine for dynamic in vivo axial loading.

Authors:  James Macione; Sterling Nesbitt; Vaibhav Pandit; Shiva Kotha
Journal:  Rev Sci Instrum       Date:  2012-02       Impact factor: 1.523

4.  Cancellous bone adaptation to tibial compression is not sex dependent in growing mice.

Authors:  Maureen E Lynch; Russell P Main; Qian Xu; Daniel J Walsh; Mitchell B Schaffler; Timothy M Wright; Marjolein C H van der Meulen
Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2010-06-24

5.  Quantification of Lacunar-Canalicular Interstitial Fluid Flow Through Computational Modeling of Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching.

Authors:  Ronald Y Kwon; John A Frangos
Journal:  Cell Mol Bioeng       Date:  2010-09-01       Impact factor: 2.321

Review 6.  Bone Homeostasis and Repair: Forced Into Shape.

Authors:  Alesha B Castillo; Philipp Leucht
Journal:  Curr Rheumatol Rep       Date:  2015-09       Impact factor: 4.592

7.  Exercise-induced changes in the cortical bone of growing mice are bone- and gender-specific.

Authors:  Joseph M Wallace; Rupak M Rajachar; Matthew R Allen; Susan A Bloomfield; Pamela G Robey; Marian F Young; David H Kohn
Journal:  Bone       Date:  2007-01-19       Impact factor: 4.398

8.  Cortical and trabecular bone benefits of mechanical loading are maintained long term in mice independent of ovariectomy.

Authors:  Stuart J Warden; Matthew R Galley; Andrea L Hurd; Jeffrey S Richard; Lydia A George; Elizabeth A Guildenbecher; Rick G Barker; Robyn K Fuchs
Journal:  J Bone Miner Res       Date:  2014       Impact factor: 6.741

Review 9.  Muscle and bone plasticity after spinal cord injury: review of adaptations to disuse and to electrical muscle stimulation.

Authors:  Shauna Dudley-Javoroski; Richard K Shields
Journal:  J Rehabil Res Dev       Date:  2008

10.  Joint loading-driven bone formation and signaling pathways predicted from genome-wide expression profiles.

Authors:  Ping Zhang; Charles H Turner; Hiroki Yokota
Journal:  Bone       Date:  2009-02-07       Impact factor: 4.398

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.