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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 58 - 58
1 Nov 2018
Wang X Bian Z Li M Zhu L
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Aging has been associated with decreases in muscle strength and bone quality. In elderly patients, paravertebral muscle atrophy is accompanied by vertebral osteoporosis. The purpose of this study was to use paravertebral injection of botulinum toxin-A (BTX) to investigate the effects of paravertebral muscle atrophy on lumbar vertebral bone quality. Forty 16-week-old female SD rats were randomly divided into four groups: (1) a control group (CNT); (2) a resection of erector spinae muscles group (RESM); (3) a botulinum toxin-A group (BTX) that was treated with local injection of 5U BTX into the paravertebral muscles bilaterally; and (4) a positive control group (OVX) that underwent bilateral ovariectomy. At 3 months post-surgery the lumbar vertebrae (L3 – L6) were collected. The BMDs of the RESM and BTX groups were significantly lower than that of the CNT group (P < 0.01). Micro-CT scans showed that rats in the three experimental groups had fewer trabeculae and trabecular connections than rats in the CNT group. The bone loss trend of the trabecular networks was most obvious in the OVX rats. Vertebral compression testing revealed that the three experimental groups had significantly lower maximum load, energy absorption, maximum stress, and elastic modulus values than the CNT group (P < 0.01), and these parameters were lowest in the OVX group (P < 0.05). Our results demonstrate that the new paravertebral muscle atrophy model using local BTX injection causes sufficient muscle atrophy and dysfunction to result in local lumbar vertebral bone loss and quality deterioration.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 115 - 115
1 Nov 2018
Müller S Nicholson L Jone E Dickinson A Dalgarno K Wang X
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Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are widely used in clinical trials for the treatment of many bone defects. Apatite-wollastonite glass ceramic (A-W) is an osteoconductive biomaterial shown to be compatible with MSCs. This is the first study comparing the osteogenic potential of two MSC populations, heterogeneous plastic adherence MSCs (PA-MSCs) and CD271-enriched MSCs (CD271-MSCs), when cultured on A-W 3D scaffold. The paired MSC populations were assessed for their attachment, growth kinetics and ALP activity using confocal or scanning electron microscopy and the quantifications of DNA contents and p-nitrophenyl (pNP) production. While the PA-MSCs and CD271-MSCs had similar expansion and tri-lineage differentiation capacity during standard 2D culture, they showed different proliferation kinetics when seeded on the A-W scaffolds. PA-MSCs displayed a well-spread attachment with more elongated morphology compared to CD271-MSCs, signifying a different level of interaction between the cell populations and the scaffold surface. PA-MSCs also fully integrated into the scaffold surface and showed a stronger propensity for osteogenic differentiation on the A-W scaffold as indicated by higher ALP activity than CD271-MSCs. Furthermore, A-W scaffold seeded uncultured bone marrow mononuclear cells (BM-MNCs) demonstrated a higher proliferation rate and greater ALP activity compared to freshly isolated CD271-enriched BM-MNCs. Our findings suggest that enrichment of CD271-positive population is not beneficial for osteogenesis when the cells are seeded on A-W scaffold. Furthermore, unselected heterogeneous MSCs or BM-MNCs are more promising for A-W scaffold-based bone regeneration, providing novel insight with potential clinical implications in regenerative medicine for bone defects using an innovative tissue engineering approach.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 7, Issue 5 | Pages 343 - 350
1 May 2018
He A Ning Y Wen Y Cai Y Xu K Cai Y Han J Liu L Du Y Liang X Li P Fan Q Hao J Wang X Guo X Ma T Zhang F

Aim

Osteoarthritis (OA) is caused by complex interactions between genetic and environmental factors. Epigenetic mechanisms control the expression of genes and are likely to regulate the OA transcriptome. We performed integrative genomic analyses to define methylation-gene expression relationships in osteoarthritic cartilage.

Patients and Methods

Genome-wide DNA methylation profiling of articular cartilage from five patients with OA of the knee and five healthy controls was conducted using the Illumina Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip (Illumina, San Diego, California). Other independent genome-wide mRNA expression profiles of articular cartilage from three patients with OA and three healthy controls were obtained from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database. Integrative pathway enrichment analysis of DNA methylation and mRNA expression profiles was performed using integrated analysis of cross-platform microarray and pathway software. Gene ontology (GO) analysis was conducted using the Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery (DAVID).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 11 - 11
1 Jul 2014
Guo B Wang X Hong A Lu A Zhang B Zhang G
Full Access

Summary Statement

The stable inhibition of miR-214 in the aged osteoporotic rats induced by OVX could be achieved by periodic administration of AntagomiR-214 at a dosage of 4 mg/kg and at an interval of 7 days, which will provide a potential bone anabolic strategy for treatment of osteoprosis.

Introduction

MiR-214 has a crucial role in suppressing bone formation and miR-214 inhibition in osteogenic cells may be a potential anabolic strategy for ameliorating osteoporosis (Wang X, et al. 2013). An aged ovariectomised rat has been regarded as a golden model to test bone anabolic agents for reversing established osteoporosis in aged postmenopausal women (Li X, et al. 2009). However, there is still lack of evidence to demonstrate bone anabolic potential of therapeutic inhibition of miR-214 within osteogenic cells in the golden model. So, it should be necessary to establish RNAi-based administration protocol toward stable inhibition of miR-214 at a low level in the golden model. A targeted delivery system specifically facilitating Antagomir-214 approaching osteogenic cells, i.e. (Asp-Ser-Ser)6-liposome (Zhang G, et al 2012), was employed in this study.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_VIII | Pages 59 - 59
1 Mar 2012
Cui F Wang X Dighe A Balian G Cui Q
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Introduction

Enhanced angiogenesis and osteogenesis may provide new strategies for the treatment of osteonecrosis.

Methods

Synergistic effects of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and bone morphogenetic protein - 6 (BMP-6) on in vitro osteogenic differentiation and in vivo ectopic bone formation mediated by a cloned mouse bone marrow stromal cell line, D1, previously isolated from Balb/c mice in our laboratory, were determined.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_VIII | Pages 56 - 56
1 Mar 2012
Zawodny SR Wang X Balian G Cui Q
Full Access

Introduction

Osteonecrosis of the femoral head is a devastating disease in young patients and remains a challenge for clinicians and researchers alike. To increase understanding of the disease and produce effective treatments that preserve a patient's native hip, an animal model that mimics the disease process in humans, including collapse of the femoral head, is essential. Our goal was to create such a bipedal model by surgically inducing osteonecrosis in the femoral heads of chickens.

Methods

A lateral approach to the proximal femur was used to access the hip, dislocate the femoral head, and sever the periosteal network of blood vessels. At 4, 8, 12, and 20 weeks after surgery, both the left (experimental) and right (control) femoral heads were harvested from 6 chickens for micro-CT and histological analysis.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 93-B, Issue 4 | Pages 558 - 565
1 Apr 2011
Xie X Wang X Zhang G Liu Z Yao D Hung L Hung VW Qin L

Corticosteroids are prescribed for the treatment of many medical conditions and their adverse effects on bone, including steroid-associated osteoporosis and osteonecrosis, are well documented. Core decompression is performed to treat osteonecrosis, but the results are variable. As steroids may affect bone turnover, this study was designed to investigate bone healing within a bone tunnel after core decompression in an experimental model of steroid-associated osteonecrosis. A total of five 28-week-old New Zealand rabbits were used to establish a model of steroid-induced osteonecrosis and another five rabbits served as controls. Two weeks after the induction of osteonecrosis, core decompression was performed by creating a bone tunnel 3 mm in diameter in both distal femora of each rabbit in both the experimental osteonecrosis and control groups. An in vivo micro-CT scanner was used to monitor healing within the bone tunnel at four, eight and 12 weeks postoperatively. At week 12, the animals were killed for histological and biomechanical analysis.

In the osteonecrosis group all measurements of bone healing and maturation were lower compared with the control group. Impaired osteogenesis and remodelling within the bone tunnel was demonstrated in the steroid-induced osteonecrosis, accompanied by inferior mechanical properties of the bone.

We have confirmed impaired bone healing in a model of bone defects in rabbits with pulsed administration of corticosteroids. This finding may be important in the development of strategies for treatment to improve the prognosis of fracture healing or the repair of bone defects in patients receiving steroid treatment.