Bone's mechanostat: A 2003 update

被引:1081
作者
Frost, HM [1 ]
机构
[1] So Colorado Clin, Dept Orthopaed, Pueblo, CO 81008 USA
来源
ANATOMICAL RECORD PART A-DISCOVERIES IN MOLECULAR CELLULAR AND EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY | 2003年 / 275A卷 / 02期
关键词
nontraumatic fractures; muscle; osteoporosis; osteogenesis imperfecta; bone quality; vibration; hormones;
D O I
10.1002/ar.a.10119
中图分类号
R602 [外科病理学、解剖学]; R32 [人体形态学];
学科分类号
100101 [人体解剖与组织胚胎学];
摘要
The still-evolving mechanostat hypothesis for bones inserts tissue-level realities into the former knowledge gap between bone's organ-level and cell-level realities. It concerns load-bearing bones in postnatal free-living bony vertebrates, physiologic bone loading, and how bones adapt their strength to the mechanical loads on them. Voluntary mechanical usage determines most of the postnatal strength of healthy bones in ways that minimize nontraumatic fractures and create a bone-strength safety factor. The mechanostat hypothesis predicts 32 things that occur, including the gross anatomical bone abnormalities in osteogenesis imperfecta; it distinguishes postnatal situations from baseline conditions at birth; it distinguishes bones that carry typical voluntary loads from bones that have other chief functions; and it distinguishes traumatic from nontraumatic fractures. It provides functional definitions of mechanical bone competence, bone quality, osteopenias, and osteoporoses. It includes permissive hormonal and other effects on bones, a marrow mediator mechanism, some limitations of clinical densitometry, a cause of bone "mass" plateaus during treatment, an "adaptational lag" in some children, and some vibration effects on bones. The mechanostat hypothesis may have analogs in nonosseous skeletal organs as well. (C) 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:1081 / 1101
页数:21
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