Author/Authors :
Botega, Iara Inácio School of Medicine - Universidade de São Paulo (USP), Ribeirao Preto-SP, Brazil , Zamarioli, Ariane School of Medicine - Universidade de São Paulo (USP), Ribeirao Preto-SP, Brazil , Guedes, Patrícia Madalena San Gregório School of Medicine - Universidade de São Paulo (USP), Ribeirao Preto-SP, Brazil , Silva, Raquel Assed Bezerra da Department of Children’s Clinic - School of Dentistry - USP, Ribeirao Preto-SP, Brazil , Issa, João Paulo Mardegan Department of Morphology, Physiology and Basic Pathology - School of Dentistry - USP, Ribeirao Preto-SP, Brazil , Butezloff, Mariana Maloste School of Medicine - USP, Ribeirao Preto-SP, Brazil , Sousa, Yara Terezinha Corrêa Silva School of Dentistry - Universidade de Ribeirão Preto (UNAERP), Brazil , Ximenez, João Paulo Bianchi School of Pharmaceutical Sciences - USP, Ribeirao Preto-SP, Brazil , Volpon, José Batista Department of Biomechanics, Medicine and Rehabilitation of the Locomotor System - School of Medicine - USP, Ribeirao Preto-SP, Brazil
Abstract :
Purpose:
To evaluate the effects of food restriction on fracture healing in growing rats.
Methods:
Sixty-eight male Wistar rats were assigned to two groups: (1) Control and (2) Dietary restriction. After weaning the dietary restricted animals were fed ad libitum for 42 days with 50% of the standard chow ingested by the control group. Subsequently, the animals underwent bone fracture at the diaphysis of the right femur, followed by surgical stabilization of bone fragments. On days 14 and 28 post-fracture, the rats were euthanized, and the fractured femurs were dissected, the callus was analyzed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, micro-computed tomography, histomorphometry, mechanical tests, and gene expression.
Results:
Dietary restriction decreased body mass gain and resulted in several phenotypic changes at the bone callus (a delay in cell proliferation and differentiation, lower rate of newly formed bone and collagen deposition, reductions in bone callus density and size, decrease in tridimensional callus volume, deterioration in microstructure, and reduction in bone callus strength), together with the downregulated expression of osteoblast-related genes.
Conclusion:
Dietary restriction had detrimental effects on osseous healing, with a healing delay and a lower quality of bone callus formation.
Keywords :
Malnutrition , Osteoporosis , Fractures , Bone , Bony Callus , Rats