| Literature DB >> 3379508 |
T M Skerry1, L Bitensky, J Chayen, L E Lanyon.
Abstract
The load-carrying capacity of the skeleton is achieved and maintained as the result of a continued functional stimulus to the cell populations responsible for bone remodeling. Although some bone cells have been assumed to be influenced by the load-induced changes in strain throughout the matrix, no evidence is available to indicate which cells are susceptible to such strain change or how such transient events provide a sustained influence on cell behaviour. In the present study, we showed that a short period of dynamic loading in vivo affects the orientation of proteoglycan within bone tissue. This reorientation declines only slowly, thus providing a persistent record of the tissue's recent strain history. Such a record has the ability not only to "capture" strain transients but also to "update" and "average" them. In this way, the bone cells could be presented with a sustained and coherent stimulus directly related to dynamic strain transients. These transients are the tissue's principal function variable.Mesh:
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Year: 1988 PMID: 3379508 DOI: 10.1002/jor.1100060411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Res ISSN: 0736-0266 Impact factor: 3.494