Can low doses of simvastatin enhance fracture healing? An experimental study in rabbits
Autor: | Apostolos Papalois, Panagiotis G. Ntagiopoulos, George Agrogiannis, Konstantinos J. Kazakos, Antonios Asimakopoulos, Dionysios Verettas, Alexia Balanika, Eleftheria Papadopoulou, Dionysios Chissas, Emmanouel Agapitos, George Stamatopoulos, George Anastopoulos, Athanasios Papaeliou |
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Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Simvastatin Anabolism Callus formation Bone healing Bone Density Internal medicine medicine Animals Quantitative computed tomography General Environmental Science Fracture Healing medicine.diagnostic_test biology Dose-Response Relationship Drug business.industry Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA reductase Ulna Fractures Biomechanical Phenomena Disease Models Animal Endocrinology HMG-CoA reductase Systemic administration biology.protein General Earth and Planetary Sciences Rabbits business medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Injury. 41(7) |
ISSN: | 1879-0267 |
Popis: | Several observational and experimental studies have investigated the potential anabolic effects of statins on undisturbed bone but only a few recent studies have examined the effect of statins on skeletal repair. The goal of the study is to investigate any potential early anabolic effect of the systemic administration of simvastatin in low doses (based on earlier safety and efficacy studies on undisturbed bone) on fracture healing. Fifty-four skeletally mature male New Zealand White rabbits were used for the study. The rabbits were assigned to one of three experimental groups: a control group, and two groups that were orally administrated a diet with 10 and 30 mg/kg/day of simvastatin, respectively. A complete biochemical blood count was performed to exclude drug-induced complications. Half of the animals of each group were sacrificed at 15 days and the other half at 30 days after surgery at which time intervals healing quality was assessed. The bones were subjected to biomechanical testing, histomorphometric analysis and peripheral quantitative computed tomography. In animals received simvastatin of 30 mg/ kg/day a significant reduction of BMD, stiffness, and energy absorbed to failure were observed. At 15 days, the amount of cartilaginous callus formation was reduced, and the void space was significantly increased, in the animals of both groups that received simvastatin when compared to the control group (p < .05). Our results suggest that simvastatin doses of 30 mg/kg/day may have a negative anabolic effect on callus formation in rabbits, whereas doses of 10 mg/kg/day seem not to produce a significant positive or a negative effect, especially at the early stages of fracture remodeling. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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