Differences in proximal sesamoid bone morphology were identified between fracture and control horses. As improved technology becomes accessible, quantitative CT could potentially be used as a clinical imaging technique to estimate proximal sesamoid bone fracture risk in Thoroughbred racehorses.
Bone adapts to mechanical stimuli. While in vivo mechanical loading has been shown to increase the density of cancellous bone, theory suggests that the relationship between tissue stress/strain and subsequent bone formation occurs at the scale of individual trabeculae. Here we examine bone formation one week following mechanical stimulus. Three bouts of cyclic loading (300 cycles/day on 3 consecutive days) were applied to caudal vertebrae of female rats (n=7). Bone formation was determined using three-dimensional images of fluorescent markers of bone formation (0.7×0.7×5.0μm(3)) and local tissue stress/strain was determined using high-resolution finite element models. Three days of mechanical stimuli resulted in an increase in mineralizing surface (loaded: 17.68±2.17%; control: 9.05±3.20%; mean±SD) and an increase in the volume of bone formed (loaded: 7.09±1.97%; control: 1.44±0.50%). The number of bone formation sites was greater in loaded animals (650.71±118.54) than pinned not loaded controls (310.71±91.55), a difference that was explained by the number of formation sites at regions with large local tissue strain energy density (SED). In addition, the probability of observing bone formation was greater at locations of the microstructure experiencing greater SED, but did not exceed 32%, consistent with prior work. Our findings demonstrate that bone formation in the week following a short term mechanical stimulus occurs near regions of bone tissue experiencing high tissue SED, although the ability of finite element models to predict the locations of bone formation remains modest and further improvements may require accounting for additional factors such as osteocyte distribution or fluid flow.
Osteocytes play an integral role in bone by sensing mechanical stimuli and releasing signaling factors that direct bone formation. The importance of osteocytes in mechanotransduction suggests that regions of bone tissue with greater osteocyte populations are more responsive to mechanical stimuli. To determine the effects of osteocyte population on bone functional adaptation we applied mechanical loads to the 8th caudal vertebra of skeletally mature female Sprague Dawley rats (6 months of age, n = 8 loaded, n = 8 sham controls). The distribution of tissue stress/strain within cancellous bone was determined using high-resolution finite element models, osteocyte distribution was determined using nano-computed tomography, and locations of bone formation were determined using three-dimensional images of fluorescent bone formation markers. Loading increased bone formation (3D MS/BS 10.82 ± 2.09% in loaded v. 3.17 ± 2.05% in sham control, mean ± SD). Bone formation occurred at regions of cancellous bone experiencing greater tissue stress/strain, however stress/strain was only a modest predictor of bone formation; even at locations of greatest stress/strain the probability of observing bone formation did not exceed 41%. The local osteocyte population was not correlated with locations of new bone formation. The findings support the idea that local tissue stress/strain influence the locations of bone formation in cancellous bone, but suggest that the size of the osteocyte population itself is not influential. We conclude that other aspects of osteocytes such as osteocyte connectivity, lacunocanilicular nano-geometry, and/or fluid pressure/shear distributions within the marrow space may be more influential in regulating bone mechanotransduction than the number of osteocytes. © 2017 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 36:672-681, 2018.
OBJECTIVE To examine whether proximal sesamoid bone (PSB) articular cartilage and bone osteoarthritic changes or palmar osteochondral disease (POD) scores were associated with exercise history and catastrophic PSB fracture in Thoroughbred racehorses. SAMPLE PSBs from 16 Thoroughbred racehorses (8 with and 8 without PSB fracture). PROCEDURES Exercise history was collected, and total career high-speed furlongs was used as the measure of total exercise per horse. At necropsy, medial and lateral condyles of the third metacarpus from each forelimb were assigned a POD score, followed by imaging with micro-CT for evaluation of osteophyte size. Three investigators that were blinded to the type of PSB (fracture or no fracture) used the Osteoarthritis Research Society International (OARSI) scoring system to evaluate acellularity, chondrocyte necrosis, cartilage fibrillation, chondrone formation, safranin O stain uptake, and tidemark advancement of 1 central sagittal tissue section/PSB (4 PSBs/horse). Cartilage thickness and bone necrosis were scored on the basis of histologic examination. RESULTS POD score, osteophyte size score, percentage of bone necrosis, tidemark advancement, chondrone formation, and total OARSI score were greater in horses with more accrued total career high-speed furlongs. Scores for POD, osteophyte size, fibrillation, acellularity, chondrone formation, and total OARSI were greater for horses with PSB fracture. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE OARSI scoring revealed that more advanced osteoarthritic changes strongly correlated with total career high-speed furlongs and PSB fracture. However, the effect of exercise was dominant, suggesting that exercise history will be important to include in future models that aim to assess risk factors for catastrophic PSB fracture.
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