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Introduction: The purpose of this study was to determine whether regional blood flow (microspheres) in the femur is diminished with aging, and whether a reduction in flow is associated with impaired endothelium-dependent vasodilation.
Materials and Methods: Blood flow and PNA endothelium-dependent vasodilation was measured in young (4–6 months old) and aged (24–26 months old) male Fischer-344 rats.
Results: Blood flow in the aged rats was ~25% lower in femoral bone and 45% lower in diaphyseal marrow. Endothelium-dependent vasodilation was lower with old age (young: 83 ± 6% maximal relaxation; aged: 62 ± 5% maximal relaxation) and was mediated through impairment of the NOS signaling pathway, which resulted in a lower nitric oxide bioavailability (young: 168 ± 56 nM nitric oxide; aged: 50 ± 7 nM nitric oxide).
Discussion: Such age-related changes in bone perfusion and nitric oxide signaling could impact clinical bone loss, increase risk of fracture, and impair fracture healing in the elderly.