Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Partial maintenance of extra cancellous bone mass by antiresorptive agents after discontinuation of human parathyroid hormone (1–38) in right hindlimb immobilized rats

Journal Article · · Journal of Bone and Mineral Research
Abstract

The current study employs the immobilization (IM) rat model to induce osteopenia, parathyroid hormone (PTH) as the anabolic agent to restore bone mass, and 17β-estradiol, calcitonin, or risedronate as the maintenance agents to answer the following questions: How much cancellous bone loss occurs when PTH is withdrawn? Which antiresorptive or antiactivation agent maintains bone best? Ideally, what tissue-level histomorphometric conditions maintain added bone? Six-month-old female rats were treated with 200 μg PTH/kg/day subcutaneously at 30 days post-IM for 75 days. Then PTH treatment was stopped and switched to a vehicle (no treatment), 10 μg calcitonin/kg/day, 10 μg 17β-estradiol/kg/day, or 5 μg risedronate twice weekly for another 15 days (early response) or 60 days (late response). The rats had their right hindlimb immobilized throughout the study. The current report deals only with the maintenance phase involving 92 animals. Bone histomorphometry was performed on the secondary spongiosa of the right proximal tibial metaphysis (PTM). Cessation of PTH treatment followed by vehicle administration for 15 days resulted in partial loss of trabecular bone area and thickness from stimulated bone resorption and the fall of all formation indices. By contrast, all three antiresorptive agents maintained the cancellous bone mass during the same period. However, after prolonged withdrawal of PTH for 60 days, we found that 17β-estradiol and calcitonin maintained the cancellous bone slightly better than no treatment, while risedronate partially protected it from the mechanostat-induced bone loss. The risedronate treatment retained 71% of the PTH-added bone while calcitonin retained 48%, estrogen 42%, and no treatment 32%. The favorable histomorphometry profile for maintenance was the sustained reduction in bone resorption and turnover and normal age-related bone balance. We concluded that 1) cessation of PTH treatment will result in the loss of two-thirds of the added bone in 60 days; 2) currently, risedronate at the dose level employed as a maintenance agent is far superior to 17β-estradiol or calcitonin because of its long retention in bone; however, a longer observation period might result in less difference; and 3) the ideal tissue-level histomorphometry continues depressing bone resorption and turnover and maintains a normal age-related bone balance. Furthermore, we found the “lose, restore plus add, and maintain (LRAM)” concept was successful in maintaining most of the PTH-induced extra bone by risedronate for 60 days. It was far superior to 17β-estradiol or calcitonin. Possibly the last two agents would be effective in maintaining a normal amount of bone but not in preserving an excessive amount of bone. Nevertheless, the current study further emphasizes that clinicians should consider using the LRM treatment strategy when they plan to treat osteoporosis with bone anabolic agents.

Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
Grant/Contract Number:
AC02-76EV00119
OSTI ID:
2283130
Journal Information:
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, Journal Name: Journal of Bone and Mineral Research Journal Issue: 11 Vol. 10; ISSN 0884-0431
Publisher:
Oxford University PressCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

References (21)

Adaptation of cancellous bone to aging and immobilization in the rat: A single photon absorptiometry and histomorphometry study journal May 1990
Adaptation of cancellous bone to aging and immobilization in growing rats journal November 1992
Bone histomorphometry: Standardization of nomenclature, symbols, and units: Report of the asbmr histomorphometry nomenclature committee journal December 1987
Restoring and maintaining bone in osteopenic female rat skeleton: I. Changes in bone mass and structure journal September 1992
Intranasal calcitonin suppresses increased bone resorption during short-term immobilization: A double-blind study of the effects of intranasal calcitonin on biochemical parameters of bone turnover journal December 1993
Human parathyroid hormone-(1–38) restores cancellous bone to the immobilized, osteopenic proximal tibial metaphysis in rats journal March 1995
Skeletal effects of withdrawal of estrogen and diphosphonate treatment in ovariectomized rats journal September 1993
A quantitative histologic analysis of the growing long bone metaphysis journal December 1980
Coherence treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis with growth hormone and calcitonin journal September 1987
The role of prostaglandins in bone in vivo journal November 1990
Loss of the anabolic effect of parathyroid hormone on bone after discontinuation of hormone in rats journal January 1989
Effect of (Asu1,7)-eel calcitonin on the prevention of osteoporosis induced by combination of immobilization and ovariectomy in the rat journal January 1989
Partial loss of anabolic effect of prostaglandin E2 on bone after its withdrawal in rats journal January 1991
Prostaglandin E2 restores cancellous bone to immobilized limb and adds bone to overloaded limb in right hindlimb immobilization rats journal May 1993
Maintaining restored bone with bisphosphonate in the ovariectomized rat skeleton: Dynamic histomorphometry of changes in bone mass journal May 1993
Bone Response to Termination of ŒStrogen Treatment journal June 1978
Bone mass in Postmenopausal Women After Withdrawal of Oestrogen/Gestagen Replacement Therapy journal February 1981
Maintenance of bone mass by physical exercise after discontinuation of intermittent hPTH(1–34) administration journal December 1993
Nasal Calcitonin for Treatment of Established Osteoporosis journal April 1989
Estrogen Treatment Prevents Osteopenia and Depresses Bone Turnover in Ovariectomized Rats* journal August 1988
Skeletal Effects of Calcitonin in Ovariectomized Rats* journal October 1991

Similar Records

Restoring and maintaining bone in osteopenic female rat skeleton: I. Changes in bone mass and structure
Journal Article · Mon Aug 31 20:00:00 EDT 1992 · Journal of Bone and Mineral Research · OSTI ID:2283092

Extra cancellous bone induced by combined prostaglandin E2 and risedronate administration is maintained after their withdrawal in older female rats
Journal Article · Wed May 31 20:00:00 EDT 1995 · Journal of Bone and Mineral Research · OSTI ID:2283121

Prolonged Treatments With Antiresorptive Agents and PTH Have Different Effects on Bone Strength and the Degree of Mineralization in Old Estrogen-Deficient Osteoporotic Rats
Journal Article · Thu Dec 03 23:00:00 EST 2009 · Journal of Bone and Mineral Research · OSTI ID:1627117

Related Subjects