Individualized cyclic mechanical loading improves callus properties during the remodelling phase of fracture healing in mice as assessed from time-lapsed in vivo imaging

Abstract Fracture healing is regulated by mechanical loading. Understanding the underlying mechanisms during the different healing phases is required for targeted mechanical intervention therapies. Here, the influence of individualized cyclic mechanical loading on the remodelling phase of fracture h...

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Autores principales: Esther Wehrle, Graeme R. Paul, Duncan C. Tourolle né Betts, Gisela A. Kuhn, Ralph Müller
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Nature Portfolio 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/61aab4dbd32540f1898636b7893249b4
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Sumario:Abstract Fracture healing is regulated by mechanical loading. Understanding the underlying mechanisms during the different healing phases is required for targeted mechanical intervention therapies. Here, the influence of individualized cyclic mechanical loading on the remodelling phase of fracture healing was assessed in a non-critical-sized mouse femur defect model. After bridging of the defect, a loading group (n = 10) received individualized cyclic mechanical loading (8–16 N, 10 Hz, 5 min, 3 × /week) based on computed strain distribution in the mineralized callus using animal-specific real-time micro-finite element analysis with 2D/3D visualizations and strain histograms. Controls (n = 10) received 0 N treatment at the same post-operative time-points. By registration of consecutive scans, structural and dynamic callus morphometric parameters were followed in three callus sub-volumes and the adjacent cortex showing that the remodelling phase of fracture healing is highly responsive to cyclic mechanical loading with changes in dynamic parameters leading to significantly larger formation of mineralized callus and higher degree of mineralization. Loading-mediated maintenance of callus remodelling was associated with distinct effects on Wnt-signalling-associated molecular targets Sclerostin and RANKL in callus sub-regions and the adjacent cortex (n = 1/group). Given these distinct local protein expression patterns induced by cyclic mechanical loading during callus remodelling, the femur defect loading model with individualized load application seems suitable to further understand the local spatio-temporal mechano-molecular regulation of the different fracture healing phases.