Indomethacin modulation of load-related stimulation of new bone formationin vivo
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Calcified Tissue International
- Vol. 45 (1) , 34-40
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02556658
Abstract
The capacity of bone to organize and reorganize its structure in response to changing mechanical demands is well recognized. However, the mechanism by which the changing mechanical environment is detected, and the means by which this information is translated into a stimulus for structural modification, are not understood. A group of substances suggested to be involved in the initial transduction of strain information are the prostaglandins. In this experiment we used a single period of dynamic loading to stimulate an adaptive osteogenic responsein vivo. Loading was performed in the presence and absence of indomethacin. Measurements of the periosteum 5 days after loading showed that the presence of indomethacin at the time of loading reduced the osteogenic response. Though consistent with the hypothesis that prostaglandins are involved in the initial transduction of tissue strain into a biochemical response, this result is not sufficient to demonstrate this conclusively because reduced prostaglandin levels during the 24 hours immediately after the period of loading may affect many other points in the cascade of events between strain transduction and adaptive new bone formation. Furthermore, indomethacin at the relatively high levels we used (40 mg/kg) may have effects other than those on prostaglandin synthesis.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- 12. Early cellular responses in load-related adaptive bone remodellingBone, 1988
- Direct transformation from quiescence to bone formation in the adult periosteum following a single brief period of bone loadingJournal of Bone and Mineral Research, 1988
- Loading‐related reorientation of bone proteoglycan in vivo. Strain memory in bone tissue?Journal of Orthopaedic Research, 1988
- The role of bone cells in increasing metaphyseal hard tissue in rapidly growing rats treated with prostaglandin E2Bone, 1987
- Early Signals in the Mitogenic ResponseScience, 1986
- Prostaglandins change cell shape and increase intercellular gap junctions in osteoblasts cultured from rat fetal calvariaJournal of Bone and Mineral Research, 1986
- Canalicular communication in the cortices of human long bonesThe Anatomical Record, 1985
- Regulation of bone mass by mechanical strain magnitudeCalcified Tissue International, 1985
- Nuclear size as a cell‐kinetic marker for osteoblast differentiationJournal of Anatomy, 1982
- Indomethacin in submicromolar concentrations inhibits cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinaseNature, 1978