4.5 Article

Bone loss after severe spinal cord injury coincides with reduced bone formation and precedes bone blood flow deficits

期刊

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
卷 131, 期 4, 页码 1288-1299

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00444.2021

关键词

perfusion; skeletal; unloading; vascular; vasculature

资金

  1. Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Research and Development, Rehabilitation Research and Development Service Small Projects in Rehabilitation Research (SPiRE) [1I21RX002185-01]
  2. Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE) [B9280-O]
  3. North Florida/South Georgia Veterans Health System

向作者/读者索取更多资源

For the first time, it has been shown that reduced blood flow in the femur and tibia occurs in conscious rats after severe contusion spinal cord injury (SCI), leading to severe bone microstructural deterioration.
Diminished bone perfusion develops in response to disuse and has been proposed as a mechanism underlying bone loss. Bone blood flow (BF) has not been investigated within the unique context of severe contusion spinal cord injury (SCI), a condition that produces neurogenic bone loss that is precipitated by disuse and other physiological consequences of central nervous system injury. Herein, 4-mo-old male Sprague-Dawley rats received T-9 laminectomy (SHAM) or laminectomy with severe contusion SCI (n = 20/group). Time course assessments of hindlimb bone microstructure and bone perfusion were performed in vivo at 1- and 2-wk postsurgery via microcomputed tomography (microCT) and intracardiac microsphere infusion, respectively, and bone turnover indices were determined via histomorphometry. Both groups exhibited cancellous bone loss beginning in the initial postsurgical week, with cancellous and cortical bone deficits progressing only in SCI thereafter. Trabecular bone deterioration coincided with uncoupled bone turnover after SCI, as indicated by signs of ongoing osteoclast-mediated bone resorption and a near-complete absence of osteoblasts and cancellous bone formation. Bone BF was not different between groups at 1 wk, when both groups displayed bone loss. In comparison, femur and tibia perfusion was 30%-40% lower in SCI versus SHAM at 2 wk, with the most pronounced regional BF deficits occurring at the distal femur. Significant associations existed between distal femur BF and cancellous and cortical bone loss indices. Our data provide the first direct evidence indicating that bone BF deficits develop in response to SCI and temporally coincide with suppressed bone formation and with cancellous and cortical bone deterioration. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We provide the first direct evidence indicating femur and tibia blood flow (BF) deficits exist in conscious (awake) rats after severe contusion spinal cord injury (SCI), with the distal femur displaying the largest BF deficits. Reduced bone perfusion temporally coincided with unopposed bone resorption, as indicated by ongoing osteoclast-mediated bone resorption and a near absence of surface-level bone formation indices, which resulted in severe cancellous and cortical microstructural deterioration after SCI.

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