The effects of ultrasound stimulation on various parameters of bone repair after diaphyseal injury were assessed in a standard rat femur fracture model. Bilateral closed femoral fractures were made in 79 skeletally mature male Long-Evans rats. An ultrasound signal consisting of a 200 microsecond burst sine wave of 0.5 MHz repeating at 1 kHz, with an intensity of 50 or 100 mW/cm2 spatial and temporal average, was applied to one fracture in each animal. The contralateral fracture was not exposed to ultrasound and served as a control. Mechanical testing of the healing fracture was performed 3 weeks after injury. In fractures treated with a 50 mW/cm2 ultrasound signal, the average maximum torque (223.5 +/- 50.5 Nmm compared with 172.6 +/- 54.9 Nmm, p = 0.022, paired t test) and average torsional stiffness (13.0 +/- 3.4 Nmm/degree compared with 9.5 +/- 2.9 Nmm/degree, p = 0.017) were significantly greater in treated than in control fractures. In animals treated with a 100 mW/cm2 ultrasound signal, the average maximum torque and torsional stiffness were greater in treated than in control fractures, but this trend did not reach statistical significance. Biochemical analysis of callus in ultrasound-treated and control fractures failed to demonstrate significant differences in cell number, collagen content, or calcium content. Evaluation of gene expression in fractures treated with 50 mW/cm2 ultrasound demonstrated a shift in the expression of genes associated with cartilage formation; aggrecan gene expression was significantly higher on day 7 after fracture and significantly lower on day 21 (p = 0.033 and 0.035, respectively). alpha 1(II) procollagen gene expression was similarly modified, but this trend did not reach statistical significance. Expression of genes coding for bone-related proteins, including alpha 1(I) procollagen, bone gamma-carboxyglutamic acid protein, alkaline phosphatase, and transforming growth factor-beta 1, did not differ between ultrasound-treated and control fractures. These data suggest that ultrasound stimulation increased the mechanical properties of the healing fracture callus by stimulating earlier synthesis of extracellular matrix proteins in cartilage, possibly altering chondrocyte maturation and endochondral bone formation.
Comminuted and displaced fractures of the inferiorole of the patella are not easy to reduce and it is difficult to fix the fragments soundly enough to allow early movement of the knee. We have evaluated the clinical effectiveness of the separate vertical wiring technique in acute comminuted fractures of the inferior pole of the patella. A biomechanical study was also performed using ten pairs of embalmed cadaver knees. A four-part fracture was made on the inferior pole of the patella and fixed by two separate vertical wires on one side and two pull-out sutures after partial patellectomy on the other. The ultimate load to failure in the first group was significantly higher than in the second (250.1+/- 109.7 N v 69.7 +/- 18.9 N, p < 0.002), as was the stiffness (279.9 +/- 76.4 N/mm v 23.2 +/- 11.4 N/mm, p < 0.001). The separate wire technique was used in 25 patients with comminuted fractures of the inferior pole of the patella who were followed up for a mean period of 22 months (10 to 50). All the fractures healed at a mean of seven weeks (6 to 10). No breakage of a wire or infection occurred. The mean grading at the final follow-up was 29.5 points (27 to 30) using the Böstman method. This technique preserved the length of the patella, fixed the comminuted fragments of the inferior pole and avoided long-term immobilisation of the knee.
1. This study investigated the effects of dietary supplementation with chromium picolinate on the performance, serum and carcase traits and lipid metabolism of broilers. In trial 1, 120 1-day-old broilers with an equal number of males and females were assigned at random to 4 groups with 3 replicates. Four treatments with dietary supplements of 0 (control), 800, 1600 and 3200 microg/kg of chromium picolinate were used. In trial 2, 6-week-old broilers (20) were used to determine how supplements of 0, 200, 400 and 800 microg/kg chromium in an incubation medium influence their hepatocyte lipogenic capacity and adipocyte lipolysis, in vitro. 2. Dietary supplements of 1600 and 3200 microg/kg chromium in broiler diets significantly increased food consumption (P<0.05); 1600 microg/kg markedly improved weight gain (P<0.05); 1600 and 3200 microg/kg groups showed increased liver lipid content (P<0.05). However, the abdominal fat content tended to decrease in these 2 groups. 3. Dietary supplements of 1600 and 3200 microg/kg of chromium decreased serum glucose and nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA) concentrations while increasing serum phospholipid content (P<0.05). Insulin concentration decreased only in birds receiving 3200 ppb chromium (P<0.05). Serum triacylglycerol (TG) clearance rate in chromium-supplemented groups was markedly enhanced (P<0.05). 4. In addition, chromium supplemented groups had increased serum HDL contents and also reduced serum VLDL and LDL contents (P<0.05). 5. Trial 2 indicated that lipogenesis from [U-14C]glucose by isolated hepatocytes was significantly enhanced by 400 ppb chromium (P<0.05). 6. The results from this study demonstrate that a supplement of 1600 microg/kg of chromium picolinate in the ration influences the growth, carcase, serum traits and lipid metabolism of broilers.
BackgroundThe lack of epidemiologic information on osteoporotic hip fractures hampers the development of preventive or curative measures against osteoporosis in South Korea. We conducted a population-based study to estimate the annual incidence of hip fractures. Also, we examined factors associated with post-fracture mortality among Korean elderly to evaluate the impact of osteoporosis on our society and to identify high-risk populations.MethodsThe Korean National Health Insurance (NHI) claims database was used to identify the incidence of hip fractures, defined as patients having a claim record with a diagnosis of hip fracture and a hip fracture-related operation during 2003. The 6-month period prior to 2003 was set as a 'window period,' such that patients were defined as incident cases only if their first record of fracture was observed after the window period. Cox's proportional hazards model was used to investigate the relationship between survival time and baseline patient and provider characteristics available from the NHI data.ResultsThe age-standardized annual incidence rate of hip fractures requiring operation over 50 years of age was 146.38 per 100,000 women and 61.72 per 100,000 men, yielding a female to male ratio of 2.37. The 1-year mortality was 16.55%, which is 2.85 times higher than the mortality rate for the general population (5.8%) in this age group. The risk of post-fracture mortality at one year is significantly higher for males and for persons having lower socioeconomic status, living in places other than the capital city, not taking anti-osteoporosis pharmacologic therapy following fracture, or receiving fracture-associated operations from more advanced hospitals such as general or tertiary hospitals.ConclusionThis national epidemiological study will help raise awareness of osteoporotic hip fractures among the elderly population and hopefully motivate public health policy makers to develop effective national prevention strategies against osteoporosis to prevent hip fractures.
Osteoporotic fractures are one of the most common causes of disability and a major contributor to medical care costs worldwide. Prior osteoporotic fracture at any site is one of the strongest risk factors for a new fracture, which occurs very soon after the first fracture. Bone mineral density (BMD) scan, a conventional diagnostic tool for osteoporosis, has clear limitations in diagnosing osteoporotic fractures and identifying the risk of subsequent fractures. Therefore, early and accurate diagnosis of osteoporotic fractures using the clinical definition which is applicable practically and independent of BMD, is essential for preventing subsequent fractures and reducing the socioeconomic burden of these fractures. Fractures caused by low-level trauma equivalent to a fall from a standing height or less at major (hip, spine, distal radius, and proximal humerus) or minor (pelvis, sacrum, ribs, distal femur and humerus, and ankle) sites in adults over age 50, should be first regarded as osteoporotic. In addition, if osteoporotic fractures are strongly suspected on history and physical examination even though there are no positive findings on conventional X-rays, more advanced imaging techniques such as computed tomography, bone scan, and magnetic resonance imaging are necessary as soon as possible.
Background and aims: Overproduction of nitric oxide via inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) is suggested to be a significant pathogenic factor in Helicobacter pylori induced gastritis. The purpose of this study was to examine the role of iNOS in H pylori associated gastric carcinogenesis. Methods: Two types of mice were used in this study: iNOS deficient mice (iNOS2/2) and wild-type littermates. Gastric cancer was generated in mice using a combination treatment comprising N-methyl-Nnitrosourea administration and H pylori infection. Fifty weeks after treatment, tumours in gastric tissues from both types of mice were examined using histopathology, immunohistochemistry, and immunoblotting for iNOS and 3-nitrotyrosine. Results: The overall incidence of gastric cancer at week 50 was significantly lower in iNOS2/2 compared with iNOS wild-type mice (p,0.05). When analysed according to tumour pathology, the incidence of gastric adenocarcinoma was significantly lower in iNOS2/2 compared with iNOS wild-type mice (p,0.05). Immunostaining for iNOS was clearly observed in adenocarcinoma cells of iNOS wild-type mice, and was characterised by a strong cytoplasmic expression pattern. 3-Nitrotyrosine was expressed mostly in the area of the lamina propria of gastritis and adenoma lesions in iNOS wild-type mice. Immunoblotting analyses showed that iNOS and 3-nitrotyrosine were also expressed in both adenoma and adenocarcinoma tissues from iNOS wild-type mice. iNOS and 3-nitrotyrosine expression was greater in tumour tissues than in non-tumour tissues. Conclusions: These findings suggest that iNOS contributes to H pylori associated gastric carcinogenesis in mice.
Parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) is expressed by malignant tumors and leads to the syndrome of humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy. It is also expressed by a wide variety of nonmalignant tissues, in which it appears to play distinct paracrine and/or autocrine roles. The human PTHrP gene encodes three cDNA-predicted initial translational products of 139, 141, and 173 amino acids. Most human cell lines contain mRNAs encoding all three PTHrP isoforms. The physiological rationale for the existence of these three highly similar transcripts is unknown. In order to determine whether the protein products derived from these three transcripts differ, we transfected Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells and rat insulinoma (RIN) cells individually with cDNAs encoding human PTHrP(1-139), PTHrP(1-141), and PTHrP(1-173). Cell extracts and conditioned medium were then chromatographed using reversed-phase HPLC and analyzed using region-specific PTHrP immunoassays. As we had previously observed in SKRC-1 (renal cell carcinoma) and RIN(1-141) cells, multiple amino-terminal PTHrP species as well as a separate midregion PTHrP species were identified in all six cell lines. In addition, both CHO and RIN cell lines transfected with the PTHrP(1-139) construct contained a previously unrecognized carboxy-terminal fragment that reacted with a PTHrP(109-138) antiserum. This carboxy-terminal fragment was physically distinct from the midregion fragment discovered earlier and was also present in conditioned medium, indicating that it is a secretory form, rather than a biosynthetic intermediate or a degradation product.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to compare the results between exchange nailing (EN) and augmentation plating (AP) with a nail left in situ for nonisthmal femoral shaft nonunion after femoral nailing.Design: Retrospective data analysis, November 1996-March 2006.Setting: A level I trauma center.Patients: Eighteen patients with 18 nonisthmal femoral nonunions.Intervention: Seven patients with 7 fractures treated for nonisthmal femoral shaft nonunions after femoral nailing with EN and 11 patients with 11 fractures treated for nonisthmal femoral shaft nonunions after nailing with AP combined with bone grafting. Main Outcome Measure: Union and complications.Results: Five nonunions in the EN group failed to achieve union (72% failure rate), whereas all 11 pseudarthroses in the AP group obtained osseous union. Fisher exact test showed a higher nonunion rate of EN compared with AP for nonisthmal femoral shaft nonunion (odds ratio, 6.5; P = 0.002).Conclusions: AP with autogenous bone grafting may be a better option than EN for nonisthmal femoral nonunions.
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