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  • Combining anabolic loading ...
    Creecy, Amy; Segvich, Dyann; Metzger, Corinne; Kohler, Rachel; Wallace, Joseph M.

    Bone (New York, N.Y.), July 2024, 2024-Jul, 2024-07-00, 20240701, Letnik: 184
    Journal Article

    Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) increases fracture risk due to changes in bone quantity and quality caused by mutations in collagen and its processing proteins. Current therapeutics improve bone quantity, but do not treat the underlying quality deficiencies. Male and female G610C+/− mice, a murine model of OI, were treated with a combination of raloxifene and in vivo axial tibial compressive loading starting at 10 weeks of age and continuing for 6 weeks to improve bone quantity and quality. Bone geometry and mechanical properties were measured to determine whole bone and tissue-level material properties. A colocalized Raman/nanoindentation system was used to measure chemical composition and nanomechanical properties in newly formed bone compared to old bone to determine if bone formed during the treatment regimen differed in quality compared to bone formed prior to treatment. Lastly, lacunar geometry and osteocyte apoptosis were assessed. OI mice were able to build bone in response to the loading, but this response was less robust than in control mice. Raloxifene improved some bone material properties in female but not male OI mice. Raloxifene did not alter nanomechanical properties, but loading did. Lacunar geometry was largely unchanged with raloxifene and loading. However, osteocyte apoptosis was increased with loading in raloxifene treated female mice. Overall, combination treatment with raloxifene and loading resulted in positive but subtle changes to bone quality. •Combination treatment of anabolic loading and raloxifene improves bone quantity and quality in female OI mice.•Improvements were mostly with the strength of the bone, not the post-yield properties.•Osteocyte apoptosis was higher with loading in female untreated OI mice, but not in raloxifene-treated OI mice.