医学
骨质疏松症
骨细胞
合成代谢
间充质干细胞
人口
骨重建
成骨细胞
合成代谢剂
物理医学与康复
物理疗法
内科学
病理
生物
体外
环境卫生
生物化学
作者
Engin Özçivici,Yen K. Luu,Ben Adler,Yi Qin,Janet Rubin,Stefan Judex,Clinton T. Rubin
标识
DOI:10.1038/nrrheum.2009.239
摘要
A reduction in mechanical loading of the skeleton resulting from aging or a sedentary lifestyle can confer an increased risk of fracture through reductions in bone quantity and quality. Not only are mechanical signals crucial in defining and maintaining bone mass, but they also have the potential—in a high-frequency, low-intensity form—to be used in the treatment of osteoporosis. Aging and a sedentary lifestyle conspire to reduce bone quantity and quality, decrease muscle mass and strength, and undermine postural stability, culminating in an elevated risk of skeletal fracture. Concurrently, a marked reduction in the available bone-marrow-derived population of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) jeopardizes the regenerative potential that is critical to recovery from musculoskeletal injury and disease. A potential way to combat the deterioration involves harnessing the sensitivity of bone to mechanical signals, which is crucial in defining, maintaining and recovering bone mass. To effectively utilize mechanical signals in the clinic as a non-drug-based intervention for osteoporosis, it is essential to identify the components of the mechanical challenge that are critical to the anabolic process. Large, intense challenges to the skeleton are generally presumed to be the most osteogenic, but brief exposure to mechanical signals of high frequency and extremely low intensity, several orders of magnitude below those that arise during strenuous activity, have been shown to provide a significant anabolic stimulus to bone. Along with positively influencing osteoblast and osteocyte activity, these low-magnitude mechanical signals bias MSC differentiation towards osteoblastogenesis and away from adipogenesis. Mechanical targeting of the bone marrow stem-cell pool might, therefore, represent a novel, drug-free means of slowing the age-related decline of the musculoskeletal system.
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