| Literature DB >> 8338239 |
J W Chow1, S Badve, T J Chambers.
Abstract
The trabecular bone of the secondary spongiosa of mature rats shows a coupling of bone formation to resorption. It has been clearly shown that in adult man the coupling of formation and resorption involves a site-specific sequence of events, in which bone resorption is normally followed, at the same site, by bone formation. Whether the coupled processes of bone resorption and formation also occur at the same site in the rat is controversial. To elucidate the spatial relationship between bone formation and resorption in the rat, we compared the percentage of crenated and non-crenated cement lines with the percentage of crenated and non-crenated bone surfaces in the proximal tibia of adult rats aged 16 weeks to 2 years. A similar comparison was also made using bone from adult human iliac crest. We found that the trabecular bones of 16-week-old and 7-month-old rats exhibited a low percentage (7-11%) of crenated cement lines, which is opposite to the proportion (88%) we observed in human trabecular bone. In contrast, the surfaces of rat bone trabeculae showed a similar low proportion of crenated surface to human bone (rat 1.1-1.4% vs. 5% in humans). In older (2 years) rats, in which bones have ceased to grow in length, the percentage of cement lines that were crenated increased to 45%. These results imply that the major proportion of bone formation in the trabecular bone of growing rats occurs on non-resorbed surfaces.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Entities:
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Year: 1993 PMID: 8338239 DOI: 10.1002/ar.1092360210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anat Rec ISSN: 0003-276X