Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences on calcified tissues

ba0002is9 | (1) (1) | ICCBH2013

DXA and vertebral fracture assessment

Adams Judith

Vertebral fractures (VF) in adults are the most common osteoporotic fracture, are powerful predictors of future fracture risk (hip X2; spine X5) and their prevalence increases as bone mineral density (BMD) declines. The most common imaging method for diagnosis is spinal radiography, but they can be identified fortuitously also on other imaging techniques performed for various clinical indications.1 Midline reformations of multi-detector CT (MDCT) scans of thorax and...

ba0001w2.1 | Developmental biology and bone | ECTS2013

Fish as a model organism for mineralization related pathologies

Cancela M Leonor

Department of Biomedical Sciences and Medicine and Centre of Marine Sciences, University of Algarve, Faro, PortugalIn the last decade there has been a growing interest towards the use of fish as models to understand the basic mechanisms of cartilage and bone formation, maintenance and regeneration. In particular, zebrafish and medaka have become accepted models for human skeletal development and associated pathologies such as craniofacial dysplasia, oste...

ba0004is20 | (1) (1) | ICCBH2015

Bone morbidity in children with leukemia

Ward Leanne M

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most frequent form of childhood malignancy, with a cure rate that now exceeds 80%. As survival improves, the clinical consequences of ALL and its treatment are increasingly recognized, with skeletal health emerging as an important care issue. The skeletal morbidity that arises in this setting falls into two main categories: osteoporosis (low trauma fractures) and osteonecrosis (in situ bone death). Osteoporosis and necrosis ha...

ba0004is24 | (1) (1) | ICCBH2015

The new histology

Misof Barbara M

Additionally to the standard histomorphometric and pathohistologic evaluation, the transiliac bone biopsy sample from a patient can be further analyzed for additional information on structural and material characteristics. Under the term ‘new histology’, several non-destructive techniques and combinations thereof providing high spatial resolution have been introduced. In contrast to conventional histology, these techniques allow the characterization of structural, co...

ba0006is13 | (1) (1) | ICCBH2017

Osteoporosis in boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy: morbidity, mechanisms and the path forward

Ward Leanne M

Osteoporosis in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) is arguably one of the most severe bone fragility conditions among children with chronic illnesses. This is hardly surprising, given the deleterious effects of the myopathy and glucocorticoid (GC) therapy on bone strength. The severity of the osteoporotic phenotype is highlighted by observations that 60% of boys will sustain long bone fractures during childhood and a third will present with back pain due to vertebral fractures ...

ba0006is13biog | (1) (1) | ICCBH2017

Osteoporosis in boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy: morbidity, mechanisms and the path forward

Ward Leanne M

Biographical DetailsLeanne WardDr Leanne Ward is an Associate Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Ottawa where she has held a Research Chair in Pediatric Bone Health since 2010. She is the Medical Director of the Pediatric Bone Health Clinical and Research Programs at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario. Dr Ward’s research ...

ba0007is18 | (1) | ICCBH2019

Anti-resorptive therapy for the treatment of pediatric bone disorders: where do we go from here?

Ward Leanne M.

Intravenous (IV) bisphosphonates (pamidronate, zoledronic acid and neridronate) are the mainstays of medical therapy for numerous pediatric bone diseases. While most frequently prescribed for hypercalcemic disorders and osteoporosis, their potent analgesic effects have also led to their use in fibrous dysplasia, osteonecrosis, sickle cell disease, chronic non-bacterial osteomyelitis, and complex regional pain syndrome. Bisphosphonates given IV are highly effective in preventin...

ba0002is10 | The fracturing child: therapeutics | ICCBH2013

Medical therapies: present and future

Munns Craig

Bisphosphonates are the mainstay of medical therapy in the fracturing child with osteoporosis. The majority of the data in children pertains to i.v. pamidronate use in children and adolescents with osteogenesis imperfecta (OI), where pamidronate has been associated with improvements in bone mineral density, cortical thickness, vertebral shape, pain, mobility and height.1 Side-effects of pamidronate including acute phase response to the initial dose and retardation o...

ba0005p409 | Osteoporosis: treatment | ECTS2016

Atypical femur fracture in an adolescent with X-linked osteoporosis based on PLS3 mutation

van de Laarschot Denise M , Zillikens M Carola

Background: Long-term use of bisphosphonates has raised concerns about the association with Atypical Femur Fractures (AFFs) that have been reported mainly in postmenopausal women.Clinical case: An 18-year-old patient with juvenile osteoporosis based on X-linked osteoporosis due to a PLS3 mutation developed a low trauma femoral fracture after seven years of intravenous and two years of oral bisphosphonate use, fulfilling the revised ASBMR diagnostic crite...

ba0001pp218 | Cell biology: osteoclasts and bone resorption | ECTS2013

Protective effect of polyphenols from berries of Aronia melanocarpa against low exposure to cadmium-induced imbalance in the RANK/RANKL/OPG system in the bone tissue of rats

Rogalska Joanna , Malgorzata M Brzoska

Epidemiological and experimental data indicates that cadmium creates a risk of bone damage even at low exposure. Our recent findings suggest that this heavy metal may affect bone via destroying the receptor activator of nuclear factor (NF)-κβ (RANK)/RANK ligand (RANKL)/osteoprotegerin (OPG) system balance that plays a key role in the regulation of bone metabolism. The aim of this study was to investigate whether low-level exposure to cadmium, corresponding to low lif...