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. 2010 Jul;36(7):1098-108.
doi: 10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2010.04.011.

Prolonged endochondral bone healing in senescence is shortened by low-intensity pulsed ultrasound in a manner dependent on COX-2

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Prolonged endochondral bone healing in senescence is shortened by low-intensity pulsed ultrasound in a manner dependent on COX-2

Kouji Naruse et al. Ultrasound Med Biol. 2010 Jul.

Abstract

To test whether mechanical loading produces faster healing in aged mice, fractured femurs of aged 1-year-old mice were subjected to low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS), a treatment that is routinely used to help heal fractures in humans. Cyclooxygenase-2 knockout mice (COX-2(-/-)), which lack an immediate early mediator of mechanical stimulation, were also studied by histochemistry, microcomputed tomography and quantitative polymerase chain reaction to determine the role of COX-2. The healing in the aged COX-2(-/-) mice is slow during the endochondral bone remodeling (>30 d), a period generally prolonged in senescence. For aged wild-type mice, LIPUS halved the endochondral phase to about 10 d, whereas that was not the case for aged COX-2(-/-) mice, which showed no apparent shortening of the prolonged endochondral-phase healing time. Injecting prostaglandin E(2) receptor agonists, however, rescued the COX-2(-/-) callus from insensitivity to LIPUS. In conclusion, COX-2 is a limiting factor in the delayed endochondral bone healing and is induced by LIPUS, which normalizes healing rate to the wild-type level.

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