Danielsen CC, Mosekilde L, Bollerslev J, Mosekilde L. Thermal stability of cortical bone collagen in relation to age in normal individuals and in individuals with osteopetrosis.
Bone 1994;
15:91-6. [PMID:
8024858 DOI:
10.1016/8756-3282(94)90897-4]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 25] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023]
Abstract
The thermal stability of cortical bone collagen was determined in iliac crest biopsies obtained from 41 normal individuals (21 women aged 20-96 years and 20 men aged 21-84 years) and 8 individuals with autosomal dominant osteopetrosis type I (4 women and 4 men aged 17-63 years). The cortical bone was decalcified and the bone matrix was cut into 80-microns-thick freeze sections parallel to the bone surface. Circular specimens punched out from the sections were used for determination of area shrinkage during gradual heating and shrinkage temperature, Ts (representing the temperature for 50% of the area shrinkage). In normal men, Ts was not found to decrease until the age of 60-65 years, but was markedly decreased in the elderly individuals. In normal women, Ts varied considerably throughout the age range tested, without relationship to age. In contrast to age-matched controls, Ts decreased with age in men with osteopetrosis, whereas Ts in affected women was neither related to age nor different from the highly variable values found in age-matched normal women. Previous findings in rats indicate that Ts decreases with the chronological age of the bone collagen. The present results agree with these findings, which imply that a reduction in turnover rate of bone results in an increasing age and a reduced Ts of the constituent collagen. Following this assumption, the turnover rate of bone seems to be more variable in women than in men and reduced in osteopetrotic men.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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