Some Biokinetic Aspects of Calcium Metabolism in Dairy Cows

1957 ◽  
Vol 189 (3) ◽  
pp. 483-488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jack R. Luick ◽  
James M. Boda ◽  
Max Kleiber

A study was made to determine how cows which have been prefed low Ca:high P diets are better able to maintain normal serum Ca levels than are cows prefed high Ca:low P diets. Radioactive calcium (Ca45) was employed as a tracer. A procedure is presented by which the reservoirs of mobilizable skeletal Ca may be estimated. It appears that these reservoirs of skeletal Ca are larger and are turning over more slowly in cows which were prefed low Ca:high P diets. Since we found earlier that the low Ca: high P cows were in negative calcium balance, the larger stores of mobilizable Ca must accrue at the expense of stable bone Ca. A comparison of bone Ca specific activity to serum Ca specific activity indicates that nearly all the trabecular bone Ca and from 7 to 17% of the cortical bone Ca (depending upon dietary Ca/P) may be included in the ‘mobilizable Ca pool.’

1984 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Hesp ◽  
A. C. Deacon ◽  
Patricia Hulme ◽  
J. Reeve

1. Mean linear attenuation coefficients for trabecular bone (T) in the distal radius and total absorption coefficients (TA) in the radial mid-shafts of 22 patients with crush fracture osteoporosis were measured serially for a year by using computed tomography. After approximately 6 months, each patient was admitted to a metabolic ward for an 18-day calcium balance study. 2. The rate of change (trend) in trabecular bone (T) in the distal radius was a better predictor of calcium balance than the trend in mid-shaft cortical bone (TA). 3. The scatter in the regressions of the trends of T and TA on calcium balance could be accounted for by known methodological uncertainties.


1978 ◽  
Vol 87 (4) ◽  
pp. 751-758 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leif Mosekilde ◽  
Flemming Melsen

ABSTRACT Histomorphometric analysis of iliac crest biopsies was performed after tetracycline double-labelling in 22 hyperthyroid patients before and after medical antithyroid treatment for an average period of 4 months. The initially increased cortical porosity was normalized during treatment whereas the amount of trabecular bone was unchanged. The osteoclastic resorption in cortical bone decreased but was still elevated. The osteocytic osteolysis remained slightly increased. In trabecular bone, however, the bone turn-over decreased to a subnormal level following treatment and the surfaces were inactive in bone resorption and bone formation. An increase was observed in the amount, extent and width of osteoid seams due to an increase in the lifespan of bone forming sites and a prolongation of the maturity period of osteoid. The observed increased deposition of cortical bone after antithyroid treatment may explain the positive calcium balance in this period.


2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (07) ◽  
pp. 1671-1691
Author(s):  
Xiao-Li Li ◽  
Fei Xu ◽  
Fu-Hui Lin ◽  
Lian-Zhong Ai ◽  
Yong-Jian Zhao ◽  
...  

Traditional herbal formula Gushukang (GSK) was clinically applied to treat primary osteoporosis and showed osteoprotective effect in ovariectomized rodent animals and regulatory action on calcium transporters. This study aimed to determine if GSK could ameliorate aged osteoporosis by modulating serum level of calciotropic hormones and improving calcium balance. 18-month-old male mice were orally administered with either GSK (0.38[Formula: see text]g/kg body weight) or calcitriol (1[Formula: see text][Formula: see text]g/kg body weight) combined with high calcium diet (HCD, 1.2% Ca) for 60 days. The aged mice fed with normal calcium diet (NCD, 0.6% Ca) were a negative control. Trabecular bone and cortical bone properties as well as calcium balance were determined. Treatment with GSK significantly increased 25(OH)D and 1,25-(OH)2D levels in serum, moreover, it markedly attenuated trabecular bone micro-architectural deteriorations and elevated trabecular bone mass as well as strengthened cortical bone mechanical properties shown by the increase in maximal bending load and elastic modulus. Calcium balance, including urinary Ca excretion, fecal Ca level and net calcium retention, was remarkably improved by GSK, which up-regulated TRPV6 expression in duodenum and TRPV5 expression in kidney and down-regulated claudin-14 expression in duodenum and kidney. Additionally, 1-OHase and 24-OHase expression was significantly decreased (vs. NCD group) and increased (vs. HCD group), respectively, in kidney of GSK- and calcitriol-treated mice. Taken together, this study demonstrated the ameliorative effects of Gushukang on aged osteoporosis by effectively stimulating vitamin D production and improving calcium balance of aged mice with high dietary calcium supplement.


2021 ◽  
Vol 80 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 825.2-826
Author(s):  
M. Jansen ◽  
A. Ooms ◽  
T. D. Turmezei ◽  
J. W. Mackay ◽  
S. Mastbergen ◽  
...  

Background:In addition to cartilage degeneration, knee osteoarthritis (OA) causes bone changes, including cortical bone thickening, subchondral bone density decrease, and bone shape changes as a result of widening and flattening condyles and osteophyte formation. Knee joint distraction (KJD) is a joint-preserving treatment for younger (<65 years) knee OA patients that has been shown to reverse OA cartilage degradation. On radiographs, KJD showed a decrease in subchondral bone density and an increase in osteophyte formation. However, these bone changes have never been evaluated with a 3D imaging technique.Objectives:To evaluate cortical bone thickness, subchondral trabecular bone density, and bone shape on CT scans before and one year after KJD treatment.Methods:19 KJD patients were included in an extended imaging protocol, undergoing a CT scan before and one year after treatment. Stradview v6.0 was used for semi-automatic tibia and femur segmentation from axial thin-slice (0.45mm) CT scans. Cortical bone thickness (mm) and trabecular bone density (Hounsfield units, HU) were measured with an automated algorithm. Osteophytes were excluded. Afterwards, wxRegSurf v18 was used for surface registration. Registration data was used for bone shape measurements. MATLAB R2020a and the SurfStat MATLAB package were used for data analysis and visualization. Two-tailed F-tests were used to calculate changes over time. Two separate linear regression models were used to show the influence of baseline Kellgren-Lawrence grade and sex on the changes over time. Statistical significance was calculated with statistical parametric mapping; a p-value <0.05 was considered statistically significant. Bone shape changes were explored visually using vertex by vertex displacements between baseline and follow-up. Patients were separated into two groups based on whether their most affected compartment (MAC) was medial or lateral. Only patients with axial CT scans at both time points available for analysis were included for evaluation.Results:3 Patients did not have complete CTs and in 1 patient the imaged femur was too short, leaving 16 patients for tibial analyses and 15 patients for femoral analyses. The MAC was predominantly the medial side (medial MAC n=14; lateral n=2). Before treatment, the MAC cortical bone was compared to the rest of the joint (Figure 1). One year after treatment, MAC cortical thickness decreased, although this decrease of up to approximately 0.25 mm was not statistically significant. The trabecular bone density was also higher before treatment in the MAC, and a decrease was seen throughout the entire joint, although statistically significant only for small areas on mostly the MAC where this decrease was up to approximately 80 HU (Figure 1). Female patients and patients with a higher Kellgren-Lawrence grade showed a somewhat larger decrease in cortical bone thickness. Trabecular density decreased less for patients with a higher Kellgren-Lawrence grade, and female patients showed a higher density decrease interiorly while male patients showed a higher decrease exteriorly. None of this was statistically significant. The central areas of both compartments showed an outward shape change, while the outer ring showed inward changes.Conclusion:MAC cortical bone thickness shows a partial decrease after KJD. Trabecular bone density decreased on both sides of the joint, likely as a direct result of the bicompartmental unloading. For both subchondral bone parameters, MAC values became more similar to the LAC, indicating (partial) subchondral bone normalization in the most affected parts of the joint. The bone shape changes may indicate a reversal of typical OA changes, although the inward difference that was seen on the outer edges may be a result of osteophyte-related changes that might have affected the bone segmentation. In conclusion, KJD treatment shows subchondral bone normalization in the first year after treatment, and longer follow-up might show whether these changes are a temporary result of joint unloading or indicate more prolonged bone changes.Disclosure of Interests:None declared.


1995 ◽  
Vol 198 (1) ◽  
pp. 209-212
Author(s):  
R H Bonser

Vickers microhardness tests were used to gauge the mechanical "competence" (ability to resist bending and failure) of cortical and trabecular bone along the humeri of three bird species. Hardness was greatest at the mid-length portion of the shaft. The mean hardness of trabeculae, where present, was between 78.7 and 90.9% of that of the adjacent cortical bone. The possible causes of this are briefly discussed. Microhardness tests offer the opportunity to gauge differences in mechanical properties over small distances and might usefully be applied to test the homogeneity of mechanical properties within specimens for tensile or compressive tests.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Wen-Kai Tsai ◽  
Jui-Cheng Chen ◽  
Hui-Chin Lai ◽  
Wei-Chieh Chang ◽  
Takaomi Taira ◽  
...  

ObjectiveMagnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) is a minimum-invasive surgical approach to non-incisionally cause the thermos-coagulation inside the human brain. The skull score (SS) has already been approved as one of the most dominant factors related to a successful MRgFUS treatment. In this study, we first reveal the SS distribution of the tremor patients, and correlate the SS with the image feature from customized skull density ratio (cSDR). This correlation might give a direction to future clinical studies for improving the SS.MethodsTwo hundred and forty-six patients received a computed tomography (CT) scan of the brain, and a bone-enhanced filter was applied and reconstructed to a high spatial resolution CT images. The SS of all patients would be estimated by the MRgFUS system after importing the reconstructed CT images into the MRgFUS system. The histogram and the cumulative distribution of the SS from all the patients were calculated to show the percentage of the patients whose SS lower than 0.3 and 0.4. The same CT images of all patients were utilized to calculated the cSDR by first segmented the trabecular bone and the cortical bone from the CT images and divided the average trabecular bone intensity (aTBI) by the average cortical bone intensity (aCBI). The Pearson’s correlations between the SS and the cSDR, aTBI, and the aCBI were calculated, respectively.ResultsThere were 19.19 and 50% of the patient who had the SS lower than the empirical threshold 0.3 and 0.4, respectively. The Pearson’s correlation between the SS and the cSDR, aCBI, and the aTBI were R = 0.8145, 0.5723, and 0.8842.ConclusionHalf of the patients were eligible for the MRgFUS thalamotomy based on the SS, and nearly 20% of patients were empirically difficult to achieve a therapeutic temperature during MRgFUS. The SS and our cSDR are highly correlated, and the SS had a higher correlation with aTBI than with aCBI. This is the first report to explicitly reveal the SS population and indicate a potential way to increase the chance to achieve a therapeutic temperature for those who originally have low SS.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin A. Maupin ◽  
Daniel Dick ◽  
VARI Vivarium ◽  
Transgenics Core ◽  
Bart O. Williams

AbstractThe study of galectin-3 is complicated by its ability to function both intracellularly and extracellularly. While the mechanism of galectin-3 secretion is unclear, studies have shown that the mutation of a highly conserved arginine to a serine in human galectin-3 (LGALS3-R186S) blocks glycan binding and secretion. To gain insight into the roles of extracellular and intracellular functions of galectin-3, we generated mice with the equivalent mutation (Lgals3-R200S) using CRISPR/Cas9-directed homologous recombination. Consistent with a reduction in galectin-3 secretion, we observed significantly reduced galectin-3 protein levels in the plasma of heterozygous and homozygous mutant mice. We observed a similar increased bone mass phenotype in Lgals3-R200S mutant mice at 36 weeks as we previously observed in Lgals3-KO mice with slight variation. Like Lgals3-KO mice, Lgals3-R200S females, but not males, had significantly increased trabecular bone mass. However, only male Lgals3-R200S mice showed increased cortical bone expansion, which we had previously observed in both male and female Lgals3-KO mice and only in female mice using a separate Lgals3 null allele (Lgals3). These results suggest that the trabecular bone phenotype of Lgals3-KO mice was driven primarily by loss of extracellular galectin-3. However, the cortical bone phenotype of Lgals3-KO mice may have also been influenced by loss of intracellular galectin-3. Future analyses of these mice will aid in identifying the cellular and molecular mechanisms that contribute to the Lgals3-deficient bone phenotype as well as aid in distinguishing the extracellular vs. intracellular roles of galectin-3 in various signaling pathways.


1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (2) ◽  
pp. 253-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. M. Bowman ◽  
L. J. Gibson ◽  
W. C. Hayes ◽  
T. A. McMahon

Cortical and trabecular bone have similar creep behaviors that have been described by power-law relationships, with increases in temperature resulting in faster creep damage accumulation according to the usual Arrhenius (damage rate ~ exp (−Temp.−1)) relationship. In an attempt to determine the phase (collagen or hydroxyapatite) responsible for these similar creep behaviors, we investigated the creep behavior of demineralized cortical bone, recognizing that the organic (i.e., demineralized) matrix of both cortical and trabecular bone is composed primarily of type I collagen. We prepared waisted specimens of bovine cortical bone and demineralized them according to an established protocol. Creep tests were conducted on 18 specimens at various normalized stresses σ/E0 and temperatures using a noninvasive optical technique to measure strain. Denaturation tests were also conducted to investigate the effect of temperature on the structure of demineralized bone. The creep behavior was characterized by the three classical stages of decreasing, constant, and increasing creep rates at all applied normalized stresses and temperatures. Strong (r2 > 0.79) and significant (p < 0.01) power-law relationships were found between the damage accumulation parameters (steady-state creep rate dε/dt and time-to-failure tf) and the applied normalized stress σ/E0. The creep behavior was also a function of temperature, following an Arrhenius creep relationship with an activation energy Q = 113 kJ/mole, within the range of activation energies for cortical (44 kJ/ mole) and trabecular (136 kJ/mole) bone. The denaturation behavior was characterized by axial shrinkage at temperatures greater than approximately 56°C. Lastly, an analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) of our demineralized cortical bone regressions with those found in the literature for cortical and trabecular bone indicates that all three tissues creep with the same power-law exponents. These similar creep activation energies and exponents suggest that collagen is the phase responsible for creep in bone.


1990 ◽  
Vol 259 (5) ◽  
pp. E715-E722
Author(s):  
D. D. Bikle ◽  
B. P. Halloran ◽  
C. McGalliard-Cone ◽  
E. Morey-Holton

Previous studies regarding the effects of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 [1,25(OH)2D3] on bone have suggested that 1,25(OH)2D3 increases bone mass and calcium. Many of these studies have focused on trabecular or total bone without examining cortical bone per se. To determine whether the response of trabecular bone to 1,25(OH)2D3 differed from the response of cortical bone, we infused 1,25(OH)2D3 into rats and examined bone mass, 45Ca accumulation, and the density distribution of bone particles (as a measure of bone maturation) in both the proximal tibia and shaft. In the proximal tibia 1,25(OH)2D3 decreased 45Ca accumulation, yet increased bone mass and shifted the particle distribution to more mineralized fractions. In the shaft there was a redistribution of bone to less mineralized fractions that was not accompanied by a change in total bone mass or a decrease in 45Ca accumulation. Thus 1,25(OH)2D3 may retard bone maturation and mineralization throughout the tibia, but this effect in the proximal tibia appears to be overshadowed by a reduction in bone resorption resulting in an accumulation of well-mineralized bone in that region. Bone resorption, however, was not measured directly. The net result is an increase in bone mass and density of trabecular bone not seen in cortical bone.


1982 ◽  
Vol 99 (3) ◽  
pp. 533-539 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. Blaney ◽  
R. J. W. Gartner ◽  
T. A. Head

SUMMARYCattle were fed four hays in mineral balance experiments. Two of the hays (Cenchrus ciliaris and Setaria sphacelala var. sericea) contained 1·8 and 1·3% total oxalates and provided above- and below-maintenance intakes of calcium respectively. These grasses contain calcium oxalate crystals. The other two hays (Aristida spp –Bothriochloa spp. mixture and Triticum aestivum) contained 0·1% oxalates, and also provided above- and below-maintenance intakes of calcium. The absorptions of calcium from the hays providing above-maintenance intakes were 51% for the high and 57% for the low oxalate hay. At below-maintenance intakes, the cattle were in negative calcium balance and calcium absorptions were 52% for the high and 64% for the low oxalate hay. While in negative calcium balance the cattle were given single doses of calcium oxalate, followed by single doses of either limestone or rock phosphate. The cattle fed S. sphacelata hay absorbed sufficient calcium from calcium oxalate to achieve positive calcium balance, although the amount absorbed was only 52% of that absorbed from limestone. The cattle fed T. aestivum hay also absorbed calcium from calcium oxalate, but in insufficient amount to result in a positive calcium balance. The amount absorbed was 47% of that absorbed from rock phosphate. The results demonstrate that in tropical grasses containing calcium oxalate crystals, the availability of calcium is about 20% lower than it is in grasses containing little oxalate. Adaptation to oxalate may improve the ability of the rumen to utilize calcium oxalate. It is suggested that the availability of calcium to cattle grazing tropical grasses should be considered to be a maximum of 50%. Neither magnesium nor phosphorus absorptions from tropical grasses were affected by oxalate.


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