Influenced by gravidity, bone tissue experiences stronger or lighter deformation according to the strength of the activities of daily life. Activities resulting in impact are particularly known to stimulate osteogenesis, thus reducing bone mass loss. Knowing how bone cells recognize the mechanical deformation imposed to the bone and trigger a series of biochemical chain reactions is of crucial importance for the development of therapeutic and preventive practices in orthopaedic activity. There is still a long way to run until we can understand the whole process, but current knowledge has shown a strong progression, with researches being conducted focused on therapies. For a mechanical sign to be transformed into a biological one (mechanotransduction), it must be amplified at cell level by the histological structure of bone tissue, producing tensions in cell membrane proteins (integrins) and changing their spatial structure. Such change activates bindings between these and the cytoskeleton, producing focal adhesions, where cytoplasmatic proteins are recruited to enable easier biochemical reactions. Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) is the most important one being self-activated when its structure is changed by integrins. Activated FAK triggers a cascade of reactions, resulting in the activation of ERK-1/2 and Akt, which are proteins that, together with FAK, regulate the production of bone mass. Osteocytes are believed to be the mechanosensor cells of the bone and to transmit the mechanical deformation to osteoblasts and osteoclasts. Ionic channels and gap junctions are considered as intercellular communication means for biochemical transmission of a mechanical stimulus. These events occur continuously on bone tissue and regulate bone remodeling.
Metallosis is an uncommon complication following total knee arthroplasty that leads to osteolysis and implant loosening due to chronic inflammatory reaction. Abrasion between the metallic surfaces of the implant releases metallic debris that interacts with the periprosthetic soft tissues and causes chronic synovitis. Here we present a case of a 65-year-old man who had undergone total knee arthroplasty 10 years ago and developed implant loosening associated with severe metallosis and varus instability. Radiographs show the three typical signs of metallosis: metal-line sign, bubble sign, and cloud sign. This patient was subjected to revision surgery consisting of debridement and primary implant replacement by a hinged endoprosthesis. Knowledge of the typical radiographic and clinical findings of metallosis is important to rapidly diagnose this complication and avoid progressive joint destruction.
Background Low-intensity pulsed ultrasound stimulation (LIPUS) reportedly increases osteogenesis in fracture models but fails in intact bone, suggesting LIPUS does not act on mechanotransduction and growth factor pathways of intact bone. Questions/Purposes We asked whether daily 20-minute LIPUS applied to intact tibias would act on bone proteins involved in mechanotransduction (focal adhesion kinase [FAK], and extracellular signal-regulated kinase-1/2 [ERK-1/2]), and growth factor signaling (insulin receptor substrate-1 [IRS-1]) pathways at 7, 14, and 21 days of treatment.Methods Immunoblotting was performed to detect FAK, ERK-1/2, and IRS-1 expression and activation from the stimulated intact tibias at 7, 14, and 21 days of daily 20-minute LIPUS. Results LIPUS increased FAK expression (at 7 days), ERK-1/2 (at 14 days), and IRS-1 (at 7 days), but expression decreased 7 days later, indicating a noncumulative effect of LIPUS. As only FAK expression was detected at 21 days, these observations suggest LIPUS influences nuclear reactions that may be modulated by a major cellular mechanism preferentially inhibiting IRS-1 expression and not FAK expression. Increased ERK-1/2 expression at 14 days suggests the differing mechanisms for promoting ERK-1/2, FAK, and IRS-1 syntheses. IRS-1 expression behaved similarly to FAK expression; therefore, LIPUS may modulate growth factor pathways. LIPUS increased sustained FAK and ERK-1/2 activation, but not IRS-1, suggesting sustained ERK-1/2 activation is not the result of mechanically induced growth factor activation. Conclusions LIPUS acts on mechanotransduction and growth factor pathways in intact bone in a noncumulative manner. Clinical relevance These data suggest LIPUS applied to intact bone acts on proteins involved in osteogenesis.
RESUMOSob a influência da gravidade, o tecido ósseo sofre maior ou menor deformação de acordo com a intensidade das atividades da vida diária. Sabe-se que as atividades que resultam em impacto são as que mais estimulam a osteogênese e assim reduzem a perda de massa óssea. Conhecer como as células ósseas reconhecem a deformação mecânica imposta ao osso e iniciam uma série de reações bioquímicas em cadeia é de fundamental importância para o desenvolvimento de práticas terapêuticas e preventivas na atividade ortopédica. Ainda há um longo caminho para o entendimento de todo esse processo, mas o conhecimento atual progrediu bastante e há pesquisas com finalidade terapêutica. O sinal mecânico para ser transformado em biológico (mecanotransdução) deve ser amplificado no nível celular pela estrutura histológica do tecido ósseo, gerando tensões em proteínas da membrana celular (integrinas) e alterando a estrutura espacial dessas proteínas. Essa alteração ativa ligações entre elas e o citoesqueleto, originando as adesões focais, locais onde proteínas citoplasmáticas são recrutadas para facilitar as reações bioquími-cas. A quinase de adesão focal (FAK) é a principal delas, sendo autoativada após sofrer alteração estrutural pelas integrinas. A FAK ativada incita reações em cascata, resultando na ativação da ERK-1/2 e da Akt, proteínas que, junto com a FAK, regulam a produção da massa óssea. Acredita-se que o osteócito seja a célula óssea responsável por reconhecer o estímulo mecânico e transmiti-lo aos osteoblastos e osteoclastos. Canais iônicos e gap junctions são cogitados como meios de comunicação intercelular para a transmissão bioquímica do estímulo mecânico. Esses eventos ocorrem continuamente no tecido ósseo e regulam a remodelação óssea. Descritores
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