Purpose
To evaluate the effects of food restriction on fracture healing in growing
rats.
Methods
Sixty-eight male Wistar rats were assigned to two groups: (1) Control and
(2) Dietary restriction. After weaning the dietary restricted animals were
fed ad libitum for 42 days with 50% of the standard chow ingested by the
control group. Subsequently, the animals underwent bone fracture at the
diaphysis of the right femur, followed by surgical stabilization of bone
fragments. On days 14 and 28 post-fracture, the rats were euthanized, and
the fractured femurs were dissected, the callus was analyzed by dual-energy
X-ray absorptiometry, micro-computed tomography, histomorphometry,
mechanical tests, and gene expression.
Results
Dietary restriction decreased body mass gain and resulted in several
phenotypic changes at the bone callus (a delay in cell proliferation and
differentiation, lower rate of newly formed bone and collagen deposition,
reductions in bone callus density and size, decrease in tridimensional
callus volume, deterioration in microstructure, and reduction in bone callus
strength), together with the downregulated expression of osteoblast-related
genes.
Conclusion
Dietary restriction had detrimental effects on osseous healing, with a
healing delay and a lower quality of bone callus formation.
Purpose
To investigate the effects of dietary restriction on the growth plate and
long bone tissue in growing rats.
Methods
Sixty male Wistar rats were randomly assigned to two groups: Control (Con)
and Diet-restricted (Res). After weaning, the Res rats were offered 50% of
the chow ingested by the control (
ad libitum
food intake).
The animals were subdivided into two subgroups with follow-ups up to 56 or
70 days. After euthanasia, the growth plate of tibias was analyzed by
histomorphometry, micro-computed tomography, and mechanical test. The
trabecular and compact bones were evaluated by histomorphometry, dual-energy
X-ray absorptiometry, and micro-computed tomography (μCT). Real-time PCR was
used to analyze gene expression.
Results
Although dietary restriction did not alter gene expression, several
phenotypic changes were seen in the growth plate; i.e., decrease in volume,
reduction in total area and height, decrease in the area ossified zones,
mechanical weakening, reduction in mass of trabecular and cortical bone,
lower bone density, deterioration of the trabecular and cortical
microarchitecture, and trabeculae with lower collagen deposition.
Conclusion
Dietary restriction had severe detrimental effects on the growth plate and
trabecular and cortical bone.
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