Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences on calcified tissues

ba0003pp249 | Osteoporosis: evaluation and imaging | ECTS2014

Prevalence of post-operative medical and surgical complications among fracture neck of femur patients in an acute hip unit

Karim Rehmat , Siddarth K V , Gupta Abhaya

Objective: To assess the prevalence of post-operative medical and surgical complications among fracture neck of femur patients.Method: Study design: retrospective cohort study.Setting: District General Hospital in UK.Study subject: a total of 75 patients with fracture neck of femur from 2012 to 2013 were ascertained for any post-operative complications by case note study.Results: Out of...

ba0003pp344 | Osteoporosis: treatment | ECTS2014

Appropriateness of osteoporosis treatment within a medical in-patient population in a welsh district general hospital

Siddarth K V , Manupati Shilpa , Gupta Abhaya

Objectives: To assess the pharmacological management of osteoporosis in a cohort of hospitalized medical in-patients within a Welsh district general hospital.Materials and methods: We collected data using medical records on a structured proforma as a point prevalence study targeting medical inpatients aged fifty and above in an admitted hospital cohort.Results: Out of the 117 patients, 88 (75.21%) of them had greater than three ris...

ba0001oc4.1 | Osteoblasts and osteocytes | ECTS2013

High-throughput DEXA and micro-CT screening in gene knockout mice identifies bone mass phenotypes

Brommage Robert , Liu Jeff , Kirkpatrick Laura , Powell David , Vogel Peter

Screening gene function in vivo is a powerful approach to discover novel drug targets in the human genome (Nat Rev Drug Discov 2 38–51, 2003). We present data for 3776 distinct gene knockout (KO) mouse lines with viable adult homozygous mice generated using both gene-trapping and homologous recombination technologies. Bone mass was determined from PIXImus DEXA scans of male and female mice at 14 weeks of age and by microCT analyses of bones from ...

ba0001oc6.3 | Mineralisation and energy metabolism | ECTS2013

Collagen XV as a bone matrix organizer

Vicente David , Finnila Mikko , Izzi Valerio , Koivunen Jarkko , Pihlajaniemi Taina

Collagen XV is a secreted proteoglycan localized in the outermost layer of the basement membrane and in the fibrillar matrix. Previously, the collagen XV gene (COL15A1) has been linked to osteogenic differentiation, being identified mainly in mature osteoblasts forming new bone tissue or lining bone trabeculae. Our previous data on collagen XV knockout fetuses reports subtle skeletal changes. The aim of this study was to analyse skeletal changes in adult mice lacking collagen ...

ba0001pp94 | Bone development/growth and fracture repair | ECTS2013

The healing of fracture of mandible against the chronic nitrate intoxication

Aveticov David , Kostenko Vitaly , Neporada Karine , Lokes Ekaterina , Stavickiy Stanislav

Damages of bones of facial skeleton lay down 8% from all damages, fractures of mandible are 85–90% from it. There are a lot of factors, that make worse the process of reparative regeneration of bone. Using of nitric fertilizers lead to heighten earning of nitric oxide into organism. It makes negative influence on reparative regeneration of bones.There are dates of research of 40 rats line Vistar in this article. The goal of this study was to examine...

ba0001pp232 | Cell biology: osteoclasts and bone resorption | ECTS2013

The use of photo-activatable fluorophores to study the turnover of the receptor activator of NFκB receptor in health and disease

Mellis David , Duthie Angela , Clark Susan , Crockett Julie

Familial expansile osteolysis (FEO) is characterised by focal areas of increased bone turnover driven by bone-resorbing osteoclasts. The syndrome is caused by a heterozygous tandem insertion duplication mutation within the signal peptide region of TNFRSF11a (encoding receptor activator of NFκB; RANK). Our recent research has demonstrated that heterotrimeric receptor formation may hold the key to the disease phenotype. We have shown previously that, whilst homozygous overe...

ba0001pp233 | Cell biology: osteoclasts and bone resorption | ECTS2013

Investigating homozygous vs heterozygous expression of disease-associated receptor activator of NFκB mutations in vitro

Mellis David , Duthie Angela , Clark Susan , Crockett Julie

Early-onset Paget’s disease of bone (ePDB), familial expansile osteolysis (FEO) and expansile skeletal hyperphosphatasia (ESH) are related syndromes caused by heterozygous tandem insertion duplication mutations within the signal peptide region of TNFRSF11a (encoding receptor activator of NFκB; RANK). Given that patients are always heterozygous for these mutations we have generated thirteen cell lines to investigate the molecular consequences of these mutations in...

ba0001pp460 | Other diseases of bone and mineral metabolism | ECTS2013

Osteopontin ASARM peptide binding to crystal faces of hydroxyapatite – computational simulations

Mansouri Ahmad , Masica David , Gray Jeffrey , McKee Marc

ASARM peptide (acidic, serine- and aspartate-rich motif) and osteopontin (OPN) fragments accumulate in X-linked hypophosphatemia patients and/or in the Hyp mouse model and, when phosphorylated, potently inhibit mineralization in osteoblast cultures. To investigate this inhibition, we modeled the binding to hydroxyapatite of the human OPN-ASARM peptide (DDSHQSDESHHSDESDEL) using RosettaSurface computational simulations. Peptide binding to hydroxyapatite atomic planes constructe...

ba0002oc15 | Diagnostics | ICCBH2013

Bone health index: Swiss children have less in the bank than a generation ago

Thodberg Hans Henrik , Martin David D , Caflisch Jon , Jenni Oskar

Objective: The aim of this study is to compare the bone health index (BHI) for healthy Swiss children born in 1955 with healthy Swiss children born a generation later.Method: BHI is derived from the cortical thickness in the three middle metacarpals. It is determined with the BoneXpert medical device, which automatically analyses a standard bone age hand radiograph. The measurement result is independent of the sharpness of the image. The image data are f...

ba0002p34 | (1) | ICCBH2013

Reliability of pQCT scan protocol of second metatarsal for children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis

Greene David , Chaplais Elodie , Hendry Gordon , Hood Anita , Schiferl Dan

Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is associated with low bone mass, poor bone strength, and an increased fracture risk. Children with JIA enter adulthood with suboptimal bone mass. In children with JIA, fracturing of the 2nd metatarsal is common due to poor bone strength. Currently no gold standard measure exists for bone quality in the foot. A reproducible protocol is required to assess key bone outcomes at the 2nd metatarsal using pQCT.Objective: To ...