Literature DB >> 3779818

The effects of different steroids on costal and epiphyseal cartilage of fetal and adult rats.

L C Dearden, H D Mosier, M Brundage, C Thai, R Jansons.   

Abstract

The effects of different doses of various steroids on growth, and on costal and epiphyseal chondrocytes, have been studied in prenatal, immature, and adult Long-Evans rats using histochemical techniques, and both light and electron microscopy. Both prenatal and postnatal treatments have been employed. The steroids used were cortisone (CA), betamethasome (BM), and, in the prenatal group only, dexamethasone (DM). Body weight is reduced in all treated rats (except the low dose of CA) by day 17 of gestation, with greater weight reductions occurring in rats receiving the higher dose level of each steroid. In rats treated prenatally or neonatally, and sacrificed postnatally on days 39-43 or days 116-127, body weights, and tibial and tail lengths, are less than in correspondingly aged controls, thus showing a persistence of the effects of treatment. Costal and epiphyseal cartilages in prenatal rats show cellular, synthetic, and ultrastructural alterations induced by treatment with glucocorticoids but the responses are not necessarily comparable. Except for the low dose of DM, the higher doses of each steroid are more effective in inhibiting, or altering, growth and cellular differentiation in the developing fetuses. Surprisingly, a low dose of DM has a more devastating effect on the cells and extracellular matrix of both costal and epiphyseal cartilage, than do higher dose-levels of the various steroids. Low doses of CA and BM are also effective in inhibiting or altering growth and cellular differentiation, but their effectiveness is largely limited to 17 days of gestation. The order of effect of the various doses of the different steroids on fetal cartilage, listed in decreasing order of severity, is as follows: 0.12 DM, 0.24 DM, 0.42 BM, 50 CA, with 25 CA and 0.18 BM being approximately equal and only slightly different from control cartilages. The effect of prenatal or neonatal glucocorticoid treatment on chondrocytes is minimal in the 30-43 days, or 116-127 day, postnatal groups. In immature and adult rats, cortisone affects the chondrocytes more deleteriously than does betamethasone, and a 5.0 mg dose of CA seems to affect chondrocytes, body weight, and tibial and tail lengths more than 0.2 or 7.5 mg doses.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3779818     DOI: 10.1007/bf00215903

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Tissue Res        ISSN: 0302-766X            Impact factor:   5.249


  34 in total

1.  Morphologic changes in the adrenal glands of fetal and newborn rats following administration of glucocorticoids to the mother during pregnancy.

Authors:  K Lemmen; W Maurer; H Trieb; H Ueberberg; H Seeliger
Journal:  Beitr Pathol       Date:  1977-08

Review 2.  Procollagen-a precursor form of collagen.

Authors:  J D Schofield; D J Prockop
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  1973 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 4.176

3.  Postnatal effects of maternal hypercortisonism on skeletal development in newborn rats.

Authors:  A Ornoy; A Horowitz
Journal:  Teratology       Date:  1972-10

4.  Studies of the growth-inhibitory action of cortisone on chick embryos.

Authors:  A Badran; D V Provenza
Journal:  Teratology       Date:  1969-08

5.  Autoradiographic and biochemical investigations of the effect of cortisone on the bones of the rat.

Authors:  D J Simmons; A S Kunin
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  1967 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 4.176

6.  An investigation of ageing in human costal cartilage.

Authors:  L C Dearden; E Bonucci; M Cuicchio
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1974       Impact factor: 5.249

7.  Corticosteroid-induced enhanced mineralization in neonatal condylar cartilage.

Authors:  M Silbermann; Z Toister; D Lewinson
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  1977 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 4.176

8.  Whole and disaturated lung phosphatidylcholine in cortisol-treated, intrauterine growth-retarded and twin control lambs at different gestational ages.

Authors:  G W Brumley; J H Knelson; D W Schomberg; C Crenshaw
Journal:  Biol Neonate       Date:  1977

9.  Cartilage sulfation and serum somatomedin in rats during and after cortisone-induced growth arrest.

Authors:  H D Mosier; R A Jansons; R R Hill; L C Dearden
Journal:  Endocrinology       Date:  1976-08       Impact factor: 4.736

10.  Cleft palate induction in hamster fetuses by glucocorticoid hormones and their synthetic analogues.

Authors:  R M Shah; A Kilistoff
Journal:  J Embryol Exp Morphol       Date:  1976-08
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  1 in total

Review 1.  Dexamethasone: chondroprotective corticosteroid or catabolic killer?

Authors:  R Black; A J Grodzinsky
Journal:  Eur Cell Mater       Date:  2019-11-22       Impact factor: 3.942

  1 in total

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