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. 1990 Dec;47(6):383-7.
doi: 10.1007/BF02555891.

Progressive cancellous bone loss in rats after adrenalectomy and oophorectomy

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Progressive cancellous bone loss in rats after adrenalectomy and oophorectomy

T C Durbridge et al. Calcif Tissue Int. 1990 Dec.

Abstract

Female Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 72), 6 months old, underwent either sham operation, oophorectomy, adrenalectomy, or combined oophorectomy and adrenalectomy (O&A). They were all maintained on normal saline ad libitum and 20 g/day 1.1% calcium chow. Nine weeks after operation, the trabecular bone volume of the distal femoral shaft was significantly lower (P less than 0.001) in the adrenalectomized (11.1%), oophorectomized (7.0%), and O&A (8.3%) animals than in sham-operated animals (19.8%). Eighteen weeks after operation, the trabecular bone volume in O&A animals had fallen to a mean of 3.8% (sham 17.0%), and the length of the femur had increased to 38.8 mm after O&A (sham 36.8 mm, P less than 0.01). O&A animals treated with 0.35 mg/kg/week nandrolone decanoate from 9 weeks postoperatively onward, had twice the femoral trabecular bone volume of untreated animals at 18 weeks (P less than 0.05). By contrast, no significant differences were found in vertebral body trabecular bone between any groups, including groups receiving treatment with androgens. We have found that, by 9 weeks after operation, adrenalectomy alone causes significant loss of metaphyseal trabecular bone, similar to the progressive loss seen after oophorectomy.

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