4.3 Article

Developmental factors influencing bone strength in precocial mammals: An infant pig model

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANATOMY
Volume 243, Issue 1, Pages 174-181

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/joa.13848

Keywords

altricial; biomechanics; development; ontogeny; precocial; skeleton

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This study used preterm infant pigs as an animal model to investigate the factors that determine bone strength in precocial animals. The results showed that bone strength in preterm infant pigs is not significantly affected by gestation length and birth mass. These findings provide initial evidence for the bone strength of perinatal precocial mammals.
Most vertebrates are precocial in locomotion, able to walk and run soon after birth. Precociality requires a bony skeleton of sufficient strength to resist mechanical loading during early locomotor efforts. The aim of this study was to use an animal model-the preterm infant pig-to investigate some of the proximate factors that might determine variation in bone strength in precocial animals. Based on the prior literature, we tested the null predictions that skeletal integrity would be significantly compromised by truncated gestation (i.e., preterm birth) and reduced body mass at birth. We generated a suite of both morphometric measures (tissue mineral density and cross-sectional geometry) and performance-related metrics (ability to resist loading, deformation, and fracture during three-point bending tests) of the appendicular skeleton of preterm and full-term infant pigs. Results showed that very few measures in our ontogenetic infant pig sample significantly varied with either gestation length or birth mass. Overall, our results contribute to a growing body of literature demonstrating the early functional capacity of the precocial infant musculoskeletal system and suggest that bone strength in perinatal precocial mammals may be robust to the factors shown to compromise skeletal integrity in more altricial taxa.

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