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Long-term physical exercise retards trabecular bone loss in lumbar vertebrae of aging female mice
Authors:Dr. Michael Silbermann  Batia Bar-Shira-Maymon  Raymond Coleman  Abraham Reznick  Yosef Weisman  Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen  Helga von der Mark  Klaus von der Mark
Affiliation:(1) Laboratory for Musculoskeletal Research, The Rappaport Family Institute for Research in the Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Technion, Haifa, Israel;(2) Department of Pediatrics, Tel Aviv Medical Center, Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel;(3) Department of Medicine, The Max Berger Hospital, Berlin, FRG;(4) Clinical Research Unit for Rheumatology, Max-Planck-Institute, Erlangen, FRG;(5) Technion School of Medicine, P.O. Box 9649, 31096 Haifa, Israel
Abstract:Summary The present study examined the effect of long-term, moderate physical exercise on trabecular bone volume (TBV), calcium content,3H-proline uptake, and the activities of alkaline and acid phosphatases in lumbar vertebrae of aging and senescent mice. It became apparent that if physical activity starts at an early stage of life, i.e., prior to middle age and is extended until old age, it exerts beneficial effects on trabecular bone mass and mineralization. Such a positive effect is not obtained if the training program is initiated after middle age. The training-induced reduction in bone loss was accompanied by a significant decrease in acid phosphatase activity whereas no changes took place with regard to the activity of alkaline phosphatase. Long-term physical exercise also enhanced the uptake of3H-proline by lining cells along the bone trabecules. In spite of its moderate nature, the endured training program served as a stress factor for the involved animals, a fact that was manifested by an increase in the serum levels of corticosterone. Thus, it seems that whereas young animals respond favorably to such a stimulatory stress, older animals lose this ability of adaptation.
Keywords:Exercise  Bone loss  Aging  Vertebra  Mouse
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