Influence of Mechanical Stimulation on the Quantity and Quality of Bone During Modeling
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Skeletal fractures due to bone disease impact an estimated 1.5 million Americans per year, creating a large economic burden on our society. Treatment of bone diseases prior to fracture often involves bisphosphonates (current gold-standard...
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ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-108992019-05-10T15:21:43Z Influence of Mechanical Stimulation on the Quantity and Quality of Bone During Modeling Berman, Alycia G. Wallace, Joseph Na, Sungsoo Li, Jiliang Yoshida, Ken bone in vivo loading tibial loading axial compression biomechanics bone quality Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) Skeletal fractures due to bone disease impact an estimated 1.5 million Americans per year, creating a large economic burden on our society. Treatment of bone diseases prior to fracture often involves bisphosphonates (current gold-standard in osteoporosis care and prevention). Although bisphosphonates decrease fracture incidence, they often improve bone mass without regard for bone quality. Thus, although bisphosphonates increase the amount of bone present, the inherent bone material strength often decreases, creating a trade-off that increases the risk of atypical fractures after long-term use. This trade-off demonstrates the need for a treatment that targets both bone quality AND quantity. Although bone quality is important, the components of bone that contribute to bone quality are incompletely understood, making it difficult to create new pharmacological agents. With this in mind, my particular area of interest is in understanding how mechanical stimuli protects the formation of bone, leading to improved bone quality. Initially, this area was explored through use of tibial loading in a disease mouse model (osteolathyrism, induced by injection of beta-aminoproprionitrile) as a means of assessing how the body is able to compensate for decreased bone quality. The results of the BAPN and tibial loading studies indicated that injecting mice with BAPN may not be the ideal method to induce osteolathyrism. However, other intriguing results from the BAPN studies then led us into an exploration of how tibial loading itself contributes to bone quality. 2016-09-12T18:20:25Z 2017-09-13T09:30:11Z 2016 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1805/10899 10.7912/C27S3P en_US |
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bone in vivo loading tibial loading axial compression biomechanics bone quality |
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bone in vivo loading tibial loading axial compression biomechanics bone quality Berman, Alycia G. Influence of Mechanical Stimulation on the Quantity and Quality of Bone During Modeling |
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Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Skeletal fractures due to bone disease impact an estimated 1.5 million Americans per year, creating a large economic burden on our society. Treatment of bone diseases prior to fracture often involves bisphosphonates (current gold-standard in osteoporosis care and prevention). Although bisphosphonates decrease fracture incidence, they often improve bone mass without regard for bone quality. Thus, although bisphosphonates increase the amount of bone present, the inherent bone material strength often decreases, creating a trade-off that increases the risk of atypical fractures after long-term use. This trade-off demonstrates the need for a treatment that targets both bone quality AND quantity. Although bone quality is important, the components of bone that contribute to bone quality are incompletely understood, making it difficult to create new pharmacological agents. With this in mind, my particular area of interest is in understanding how mechanical stimuli protects the formation of bone, leading to improved bone quality. Initially, this area was explored through use of tibial loading in a disease mouse model (osteolathyrism, induced by injection of beta-aminoproprionitrile) as a means of assessing how the body is able to compensate for decreased bone quality. The results of the BAPN and tibial loading studies indicated that injecting mice with BAPN may not be the ideal method to induce osteolathyrism. However, other intriguing results from the BAPN studies then led us into an exploration of how tibial loading itself contributes to bone quality. |
author2 |
Wallace, Joseph |
author_facet |
Wallace, Joseph Berman, Alycia G. |
author |
Berman, Alycia G. |
author_sort |
Berman, Alycia G. |
title |
Influence of Mechanical Stimulation on the Quantity and Quality of Bone During Modeling |
title_short |
Influence of Mechanical Stimulation on the Quantity and Quality of Bone During Modeling |
title_full |
Influence of Mechanical Stimulation on the Quantity and Quality of Bone During Modeling |
title_fullStr |
Influence of Mechanical Stimulation on the Quantity and Quality of Bone During Modeling |
title_full_unstemmed |
Influence of Mechanical Stimulation on the Quantity and Quality of Bone During Modeling |
title_sort |
influence of mechanical stimulation on the quantity and quality of bone during modeling |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1805/10899 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT bermanalyciag influenceofmechanicalstimulationonthequantityandqualityofboneduringmodeling |
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1719080046449131520 |