Literature DB >> 3142673

Increased 3H-uridine levels in osteocytes following a single short period of dynamic bone loading in vivo.

M J Pead1, R Suswillo, T M Skerry, S Vedi, L E Lanyon.   

Abstract

Both ulnas of skeletally mature roosters (Gallus domesticus) were deprived of functional load bearing by proximal and distal submetaphyseal osteotomies. Twenty-four hours later the animals were injected with 1.5 mCi of 3H-uridine and the ulna on one side was subjected to a single period of a cyclical load engendering physiological strain levels at 1 Hz for 6 min. Twenty-four hours after loading the animals were killed. Autoradiographic examination of comparable regions of cortex in sections from the bone's midshafts showed that in the loaded bones, 72 +/- 2.7% of osteocytes were labeled compared with 12 +/- 3.5% in the corresponding areas of their contralateral nonloaded pair (P less than 0.001). The number of grains per labeled osteocyte was also higher in the loaded side (6 +/- 0.5 compared with 4 +/- 0.5, P less than 0.01). There was no obvious correlation between the longitudinal strain distribution during artificial loading and the distribution of labeled osteocytes throughout the bone cross-section. However, previous long-term experiments using a similar loading preparation had consistently shown the site of most periosteal new bone formation to also not be directly related to the local strain magnitude. Perhaps it is significant that the greatest percentage of labeled cells were found in the cortex where the long-term experiments had shown most new bone formation to subsequently occur.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3142673     DOI: 10.1007/bf02555153

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Calcif Tissue Int        ISSN: 0171-967X            Impact factor:   4.333


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