We recently found that silver impregnation staining with protargol (silver protein), that is, a modified Bodian method, is useful for histologically identifying the details of bone canaliculi structure, using thin sections of decalcified bone tissues. With this staining method, we conducted the present study to assess the development of bone canaliculi during the process of intramembranous ossification using a fracture-like stimulation model of the rat femur. After making a drill-hole in the cortex of the rat femur, decalcified thin sections were obtained after 3, 5, 7, and 14 days by the standard paraffinembedding procedure. Silver staining for bone canaliculi was performed using our previously reported technique. The results showed that woven bone covered the fracture surface of the cortex after 5 days, then immature lamellar bone attached to the woven bone after 7 days, and finally the lamellar bone matured and became thick with appositional growth after 14 days. The osteocytes in the woven bone appeared at an early stage of bone repair and developed a few canaliculi that were short and irregularly distributed in the osteoid matrix, while the osteocytes in the lamellar bone at a late stage formed many bone canaliculi that were long and regularly distributed in mature bone matrix. Therefore, we concluded that woven bone osteocytes may be necessary for induction of the lamellar bone osteocytes followed by active appositional growth of the lamellar bone at the early stage of bone repair, and also that both bone tissues could be clearly distinguished from one another based on the pattern of development of bone canaliculi by the osteocytes, as seen with the use of our sensitive staining method. (Bone 27: 655-659; 2000)
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