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Postmenopausal Bone Loss (postmenopausal + bone_loss)
Selected AbstractsPrevention of Postmenopausal Bone Loss by a Low-Magnitude, High-Frequency Mechanical Stimuli: A Clinical Trial Assessing Compliance, Efficacy, and Safety,JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2004Clinton Rubin Abstract A 1-year prospective, randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled trial of 70 postmenopausal women demonstrated that brief periods (<20 minutes) of a low-level (0.2g, 30 Hz) vibration applied during quiet standing can effectively inhibit bone loss in the spine and femur, with efficacy increasing significantly with greater compliance, particularly in those subjects with lower body mass. Introduction: Indicative of the anabolic potential of mechanical stimuli, animal models have demonstrated that short periods (<30 minutes) of low-magnitude vibration (<0.3g), applied at a relatively high frequency (20,90 Hz), will increase the number and width of trabeculae, as well as enhance stiffness and strength of cancellous bone. Here, a 1-year prospective, randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled clinical trial in 70 women, 3,8 years past the menopause, examined the ability of such high-frequency, low-magnitude mechanical signals to inhibit bone loss in the human. Materials and Methods: Each day, one-half of the subjects were exposed to short-duration (two 10-minute treatments/day), low-magnitude (2.0 m/s2 peak to peak), 30-Hz vertical accelerations (vibration), whereas the other half stood for the same duration on placebo devices. DXA was used to measure BMD at the spine, hip, and distal radius at baseline, and 3, 6, and 12 months. Fifty-six women completed the 1-year treatment. Results and Conclusions: The detection threshold of the study design failed to show any changes in bone density using an intention-to-treat analysis for either the placebo or treatment group. Regression analysis on the a priori study group demonstrated a significant effect of compliance on efficacy of the intervention, particularly at the lumbar spine (p = 0.004). Posthoc testing was used to assist in identifying various subgroups that may have benefited from this treatment modality. Evaluating those in the highest quartile of compliance (86% compliant), placebo subjects lost 2.13% in the femoral neck over 1 year, whereas treatment was associated with a gain of 0.04%, reflecting a 2.17% relative benefit of treatment (p = 0.06). In the spine, the 1.6% decrease observed over 1 year in the placebo group was reduced to a 0.10% loss in the active group, indicating a 1.5% relative benefit of treatment (p = 0.09). Considering the interdependence of weight, the spine of lighter women (<65 kg), who were in the highest quartile of compliance, exhibited a relative benefit of active treatment of 3.35% greater BMD over 1 year (p = 0.009); for the mean compliance group, a 2.73% relative benefit in BMD was found (p = 0.02). These preliminary results indicate the potential for a noninvasive, mechanically mediated intervention for osteoporosis. This non-pharmacologic approach represents a physiologically based means of inhibiting the decline in BMD that follows menopause, perhaps most effectively in the spine of lighter women who are in the greatest need of intervention. [source] Treatment of Skeletally Mature Ovariectomized Rhesus Monkeys With PTH(1-84) for 16 Months Increases Bone Formation and Density and Improves Trabecular Architecture and Biomechanical Properties at the Lumbar Spine,JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 2 2007John Fox PhD Abstract Histomorphometric studies of treatments for osteoporosis in humans are restricted to iliac crest biopsies. We studied the effects of PTH(1-84) treatment at the lumbar spine of skeletally mature ovariectomized rhesus monkeys. PTH increased bone turnover, rapidly normalized BMD, and increased vertebral compressive strength. PTH increased trabecular bone volume primarily by increasing trabecular number by markedly increasing intratrabecular tunneling. Introduction: Histomorphometric studies of the anabolic properties of PTH(1-84) (PTH) and related peptides in human bone are restricted to iliac crest biopsies. The ovariectomized (OVX) monkey is an accepted model of human postmenopausal bone loss and was used to study the effects of PTH treatment at clinically relevant skeletal sites. Materials and Methods: Skeletally mature rhesus monkeys were OVX or sham-operated and, after a bone depletion period of 9 months, treated daily for 16 months with PTH (5, 10, or 25 ,g/kg). Markers of bone formation (serum osteocalcin) and resorption (urine N-telopeptide [NTX]) and lumbar spine BMD were measured throughout the study. Trabecular architecture and vertebral biomechanical properties were quantified at 16 months. Results: PTH treatment induced dose-dependent increases in bone turnover but did not increase serum calcium. Osteocalcin was significantly increased above OVX controls by 1 month. NTX was significantly elevated at 1 month with the highest dose, but not until 12 months with the 5 and 10 ,g/kg doses. Lumbar spine BMD was 5% lower in OVX than in sham animals when treatment was started. All PTH doses increased BMD rapidly, with sham levels restored by 3,7 months with 10 and 25 ,g/kg and by 16 months with 5 ,g/kg. PTH treatment increased trabecular bone volume (BV/TV), primarily by increasing trabecular number, and dose-dependently increased bone formation rate (BFR) solely by increasing mineralizing surface. The largest effects on BV/TV and yield load occurred with the 10 ,g/kg dose. The highest dose reduced trabecular thickness by markedly increasing intratrabecular tunneling. Conclusions: PTH treatment of OVX rhesus monkeys increased bone turnover and increased BV/TV, BMD, and strength at the lumbar spine. All PTH doses were safe, but the 10 ,g/kg dose was generally optimal, possibly because the highest dose resulted in too marked a stimulation of bone remodeling. [source] Estrogen and Bone,a Reproductive and Locomotive Perspective,JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 11 2003Teppo Ln Järvinen MD Abstract The primary function of the skeleton is locomotion, and the primary function of estrogen is reproduction. When the skeleton is considered within this locomotive context, the onset of estrogen secretion at puberty leads to packing of mechanically excess mineral into female bones for reproductive needs. Accordingly, the unpacking of this reproductive safety deposit at menopause denotes the origin of type I osteoporosis. Introduction: According to the prevailing unitary model of involutional osteoporosis, female postmenopausal bone loss can be described as having an initial accelerated, transient phase (type I), followed by a gradual continuous phase (type II). Estrogen withdrawal is generally accepted as the primary cause of the type I osteoporosis. Thus, the quest to uncover the origin of type I osteoporosis has focused on the estrogen withdrawal-related skeletal changes at and around the menopause. However, considering that the cyclical secretion of estrogen normally begins in early adolescence and continues over the entire fertile period, one could argue that focusing on perimenopause alone may be too narrow. Materials and Methods: This is not a systematic review of the literature on the skeletal function of estrogen(s), but rather, an introduction of a novel structure- and locomotion-oriented perspective to this particular issue through pertinent experimental and clinical studies. Results and Conclusions: When considering locomotion as the primary function of the skeleton and integrating the classic findings of the pubertal effects of estrogen on female bones and the more recent hypothesis-driven experimental and clinical studies on estrogen and mechanical loading on bone within this context, a novel evolution-based explanation for the role of estrogen in controlling female bone mass can be outlined: the onset of estrogen secretion at puberty induces packing of mechanically excess bone into female skeleton for needs of reproduction (pregnancy and lactation). Accordingly, the unpacking of this reproductive safety deposit of calcium at menopause denotes the accelerated phase of bone loss and thus the origin of type I osteoporosis. [source] Effect of Hormone Replacement Therapy on Bone Quality in Early Postmenopausal WomenJOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 6 2003Ep Paschalis PhD Abstract HRT is an effective prophylaxis against postmenopausal bone loss. Infrared imaging of paired iliac crest biopsies obtained at baseline and after 2 years of HRT therapy demonstrate an effect on the mineral crystallinity and collagen cross-links that may affect bone quality. Several studies have demonstrated that hormonal replacement therapy (HRT) is an effective prophylaxis against postmenopausal bone loss, although the underlying mechanisms are still debated. Infrared spectroscopy has been used previously for analyzing bone mineral crystallinity and three-dimensional structures of collagen and other proteins. In the present study, the technique of Fourier transform infrared microscopic imaging (FTIRI) was used to investigate the effect of estrogen on bone quality (arbitrarily defined as mineral/matrix ratio, mineral crystallinity/maturity, and relative ratio of collagen cross-links [pyridinoline/deH-DHLNL]) at the ultrastructural level, in mineralized, thin tissue sections from double (before and after administration of HRT regimen; cyclic estrogen and progestogen [norethisterone acetate]) iliac crest biopsy specimens from 10 healthy, early postmenopausal women who were not on any medication with known influence on calcium metabolism. FTIRI allows the analysis of undemineralized thin tissue sections (each image analyzes a 400 × 400 ,m2 area with a spatial resolution of ,6.3 mm). For each bone quality variable considered, the after-treatment data exhibited an increase in the mean value, signifying definite changes in bone properties at the molecular level after HRT treatment. Furthermore, these findings are consistent with suppressed osteoclastic activity. [source] The Effect of In Vivo Mechanical Loading on Estrogen Receptor , Expression in Rat Ulnar Osteocytes,,JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 9 2002P. J. Ehrlich Abstract The presence of estrogen receptor , (ER,) in osteocytes was identified immunocytochemically in transverse sections from 560 to 860 ,m distal to the midshaft of normal neonatal and adult male and female rat ulnas (n = 3 of each) and from adult male rat ulnas that had been exposed to 10 days of in vivo daily 10-minute periods of cyclic loading producing peak strains of either ,3000 (n = 3) or ,4000 microstrain (n = 5). Each animal ambulated normally between loading periods, and its contralateral ulna was used as a control. In animals in which limbs were subject to normal locomotor loading alone, 14 ±1.2% SEM of all osteocytes in each bone section were ER, positive. There was no influence of either gender (p = 0.725) or age (p = 0.577) and no interaction between them (p = 0.658). In bones in which normal locomotion was supplemented by short periods of artificial loading, fewer osteocytes expressed ER, (7.5 ± 0.91% SEM) than in contralateral control limbs, which received locomotor loading alone (14 ± 1.68% SEM; p = 0.01; median difference, 6.43; 95% CI, 2.60, 10.25). The distribution of osteocytes expressing ER, was uniform across all sections and thus did not reflect local peak strain magnitude. This suggests that osteocytes respond to strain as a population, rather than as individual strain-responsive cells. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that ER, is involved in bone cells' responses to mechanical strain. High strains appear to decrease ER, expression. In osteoporotic bone, the high strains assumed to accompany postmenopausal bone loss may reduce ER, levels and therefore impair the capacity for appropriate adaptive remodeling. [source] Potent and Selective Inhibition of Human Cathepsin K Leads to Inhibition of Bone Resorption In Vivo in a Nonhuman PrimateJOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 10 2001George B. Stroup Abstract Cathepsin K is a cysteine protease that plays an essential role in osteoclast-mediated degradation of the organic matrix of bone. Knockout of the enzyme in mice, as well as lack of functional enzyme in the human condition pycnodysostosis, results in osteopetrosis. These results suggests that inhibition of the human enzyme may provide protection from bone loss in states of elevated bone turnover, such as postmenopausal osteoporosis. To test this theory, we have produced a small molecule inhibitor of human cathepsin K, SB-357114, that potently and selectively inhibits this enzyme (Ki = 0.16 nM). This compound potently inhibited cathepsin activity in situ, in human osteoclasts (inhibitor concentration [IC]50 = 70 nM) as well as bone resorption mediated by human osteoclasts in vitro (IC50 = 29 nM). Using SB-357114, we evaluated the effect of inhibition of cathepsin K on bone resorption in vivo using a nonhuman primate model of postmenopausal bone loss in which the active form of cathepsin K is identical to the human orthologue. A gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRHa) was used to render cynomolgus monkeys estrogen deficient, which led to an increase in bone turnover. Treatment with SB-357114 (12 mg/kg subcutaneously) resulted in a significant reduction in serum markers of bone resorption relative to untreated controls. The effect was observed 1.5 h after the first dose and was maintained for 24 h. After 5 days of dosing, the reductions in N-terminal telopeptides (NTx) and C-terminal telopeptides (CTx) of type I collagen were 61% and 67%, respectively. A decrease in serum osteocalcin of 22% was also observed. These data show that inhibition of cathepsin K results in a significant reduction of bone resorption in vivo and provide further evidence that this may be a viable approach to the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis. [source] Effects of a New Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulator (MDL 103,323) on Cancellous and Cortical Bone in Ovariectomized Ewes: A Biochemical, Histomorphometric, and Densitometric StudyJOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 1 2001Pascale Chavassieux Abstract The aims of this study performed in ewes were: (1) to confirm in this animal model the effects on bone of ovariectomy (OVX) alone or associated with Lentaron (L), a potent peripheral aromatase inhibitor, used to amplify the effects of OVX and (2) to evaluate the effects of a new selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM; MDL 103,323) on bone remodeling. Thirty-nine old ewes were divided into five groups: sham (n = 7); OVX (n = 8); OVX + L (n = 8); OVX + L + MDL; 0.1 mg/kg per day (n = 8); and OVX + L + MDL 1 mg/kg per day (n = 8). The animals were treated for 6 months. Biochemical markers of bone turnover (urinary excretion of type 1 collagen C-telopeptide [CTX], serum osteocalcin [OC], and bone alkaline phosphatase [BAP]) were measured each month. Bone biopsy specimens were taken at the beginning and after death at the end of the experiment. Bone mineral density (BMD) was measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) on the lumbar spine and femur. OVX induced a significant increase in biochemical markers. This effect was the highest after 3 months for CTX (+156% vs. sham) and after 4 months for OC and BAP (+74% and +53% vs. sham, respectively). L tended to amplify the effect of OVX on OC and BAP. OVX induced significant increases in the porosity, eroded, and osteoid surfaces in cortical bone but no effect was observed in cancellous bone. MDL treatment reduced the bone turnover as assessed by bone markers, which returned to sham levels as well as histomorphometry both in cortical and in cancellous bone. Cancellous osteoid thickness decreased by 27% (p < 0.05), mineralizing perimeter by 81% (p < 0.05), and activation frequency by 84% (p < 0.02) versus OVX + L. Femoral and spinal BMD were increased by MDL and tended to return to the sham values. The effects of OVX on bone turnover were different on cortical and cancellous bone. These effects on cortical bone were reflected by changes in biochemical markers. MDL markedly reduces bone turnover and increases BMD suggesting that this new agent may prevent postmenopausal bone loss. [source] A hot water extract of Chlorella pyrenoidosa reduces body weight and serum lipids in ovariectomized ratsPHYTOTHERAPY RESEARCH, Issue 2 2004Saburo Hidaka Abstract The effects of a hot water extract of Chlorella pyrenoidosa, which contains chlorella growth factor (CGF), on the body weight, serum lipids, and the bone mass were evaluated using an ovariectomized rat as a model for postmenopausal bone loss. Rats were divided into four groups: sham-operated (Sham), Sham given the CGF solution, ovariectomized (OVX), and OVX given the CGF solution, respectively. Administration of the extract to OVX rats suppressed the body weight gain. After 7 weeks, the administration of the extract to the OVX group reduced increases in both serum total cholesterols and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterols. It also normalized the decrease of triglyceride level in the OVX group. The ovariectomy decreased the tibial bone mineral density (BMD) by 19%, and the administration of the extract to OVX rats did not inhibit this decrease. These results suggest that a dietary supplement of CGF may be useful to control the body weight and improve lipid metabolism of menopausal women. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Skeletal health: primate model of postmenopausal osteoporosisAMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 9 2009S.Y. Smith Abstract Currently, the nonhuman primate is the most widely used large animal model to evaluate the safety and efficacy of new drug entities to treat or prevent estrogen-deficiency-induced bone loss and osteoporosis. Surgical ovariectomy (OVX) induces a state of high bone turnover and rapid bone loss establishing a new steady-state bone mass within 8,9 months. Many systems in the monkey are similar to humans, including skeletal and reproductive physiology and the immune system, making this a plausible model suitable to evaluate the effects of new bone drugs. The long-term sequelae following OVX and withdrawal of monthly exposure to cyclic reproductive hormones in older female monkeys (cynomolgus and rhesus) mimics estrogen depletion and postmenopausal bone loss occurring in women. Characterization of the primate model revealed an apparent limitation to the extent of bone loss. Animals lose bone mass after OVX, but the extent of the bone loss cannot be described as osteoporotic. The small differences between OVX and sham-operated controls in many important bone measurements is overcome by including 15,20 animals per group to provide adequate statistical power. The long-term, at least 16 month, bone safety studies performed to satisfy regulatory guidelines provide an opportunity to study treatment effects for an extended period not covered in shorter-term safety studies. In vivo end-points such as densitometry and biochemical markers translate easily to clinical use, while biomechanical end-points that cannot be measured clinically can be used to predict fracture prevention. To date, the monkey OVX model has been used to support submissions for many new drugs including anabolics, bisphosphonates and selective estrogen receptor modulators. Despite its limitations, the OVX monkey model remains the best characterized of the large animal models of osteopenia and has become integral to osteoporosis drug development. Am. J. Primatol. 71:752,765, 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] |