Skeletal abnormalities reported in humans and laboratory animals after spaceflight, include cancellous osteopenia, decreased cortical and cancellous bone formation, aberrant matrix ultrastructure, decreased mineralization and reduced bone strength. Although considerable effort has been made up to now to understand the skeletal effects of spaceflight, in order to estimate health risk, our knowledge in this area is still largely incomplete. It is widely accepted that the mechanical strength of cancellous bone is related not only to the mineral content, but also to the trabecular micro-architecture arrangement. Three-dimensional numerical analysis of bone volumes has been shown to be an important tool in this field. The Cell Method, a recently introduced numerical method, has been applied to static analysis of structures obtained from 3D reconstruction of micro-computed tomography scans performed at the Elettra Synchrotron facility (Trieste, Italy) in order to quantify changes in trabecular bone architecture. In the present study, the Cell Method model is used to compare the micro-tomographed structure of fragments of rats bone explants (tibial proximal epiphyses) harvested after 3 days and after 1, 2, 3 and 4 weeks of culture in the RCCS bioreactor, which represents the unique existing bioreactor, operating on the Earth's surface, capable of successfully reproducing, in vitro, optimal conditions in order to simulate a microgravity environment. Although preliminary, our results seem to suggest that the exposure of tibial bone explants to simulated microgravity conditions obtained by the RCCS bioreactor, are consistent with skeletal changes observed after spaceflight.

Structural analysis of rat bone explants kept in vitro in simulated microgravity conditions.

STEIMBERG, Nathalie;MAZZOLENI, Giovanna
2009-01-01

Abstract

Skeletal abnormalities reported in humans and laboratory animals after spaceflight, include cancellous osteopenia, decreased cortical and cancellous bone formation, aberrant matrix ultrastructure, decreased mineralization and reduced bone strength. Although considerable effort has been made up to now to understand the skeletal effects of spaceflight, in order to estimate health risk, our knowledge in this area is still largely incomplete. It is widely accepted that the mechanical strength of cancellous bone is related not only to the mineral content, but also to the trabecular micro-architecture arrangement. Three-dimensional numerical analysis of bone volumes has been shown to be an important tool in this field. The Cell Method, a recently introduced numerical method, has been applied to static analysis of structures obtained from 3D reconstruction of micro-computed tomography scans performed at the Elettra Synchrotron facility (Trieste, Italy) in order to quantify changes in trabecular bone architecture. In the present study, the Cell Method model is used to compare the micro-tomographed structure of fragments of rats bone explants (tibial proximal epiphyses) harvested after 3 days and after 1, 2, 3 and 4 weeks of culture in the RCCS bioreactor, which represents the unique existing bioreactor, operating on the Earth's surface, capable of successfully reproducing, in vitro, optimal conditions in order to simulate a microgravity environment. Although preliminary, our results seem to suggest that the exposure of tibial bone explants to simulated microgravity conditions obtained by the RCCS bioreactor, are consistent with skeletal changes observed after spaceflight.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11379/32324
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