Bone
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Low BMD is less predictive than reported falls for future limb fractures in women across Europe: results from the European Prospective Osteoporosis Study.
We have previously shown that center- and sex-specific fall rates explained one-third of between-center variation in upper limb fractures across Europe. In this current analysis, our aim was to determine how much of the between-center variation in fractures could be attributed to repeated falling, bone mineral density (BMD), and other risk factors in individuals, and to compare the relative contributions of center-specific BMD vs. center-specific fall rates. A clinical history of fracture was assessed prospectively in 2451 men and 2919 women aged 50-80 from 20 centers participating in the European Prospective Osteoporosis Study (EPOS) using standardized questionnaires (mean follow-up = 3 years). ⋯ There was no center effect evident (theta = 0.081, P = 0.096). We conclude that BMD alone cannot be validly used to discriminate between the risk of upper limb fractures across populations without taking account of population-specific variations in fall risk and other factors. These variations might reflect shared environmental or possibly genetic factors that contribute quite substantially to the risk of upper limb fractures in women.
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Comparative Study
Bisphosphonate (YM529) delays the repair of cortical bone defect after drill-hole injury by reducing terminal differentiation of osteoblasts in the mouse femur.
We evaluated the effects of YM529, a nitrogen-containing bisphosphonate, on the repair of cortical bone after drill-hole injury at the tissue-, cell- and gene-levels in the femur of mice. Eight-week-old male C57BL/6N mice were treated with an intravenous injection of 0.01, 0.05 and 0.1 mg/kg body weight (BW) of YM529, or the vehicle (VC) once a week from 8 weeks of age until sacrifice. At 10 weeks of age (day 0), a drill-hole was made in the diaphysis of bilateral femurs. ⋯ The mRNA expression levels of BMP-2, cbfa1, osterix, type I collagen, and osteocalcin in the injured bone and marrow cells at days 3 and 5 were similar in the two groups, but were higher in YM529 group at day 7 compared with that in the VC group. At day 14, the levels of these mRNAs were still high, while that of osteocalcin was significantly reduced compared to the VC group. These data indicate that the action of YM529 on bone formation is bimodal, stimulatory on the developments of osteogenic cells for the woven bone regeneration and inhibitory on the terminal differentiation of osteoblasts for the later remodeling, consequently leading to a delay in the lamellar bone healing in the cortical tissue area.
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Assessment of fracture healing is a common problem in orthopaedic practice and research. To determine the effectiveness of certain treatments, drugs, mechanical loads, or rehabilitation regimes, the strength of the fracture callus must be determined. Both clinically and experimentally, there is a need to noninvasively and quantitatively evaluate fracture callus quality during healing. ⋯ Experimentally measured torsional rigidities were compared to finite element solutions. Finite element model predictions of callus rigidity correlated significantly better with experimental torsional rigidity than other common measures of healing progress such as callus area, bone mineral density, or area moment of inertia. Using FEA to predict mechanical properties of the callus could prove to be a useful tool in fracture-healing studies.