Havill L M, Mahaney M C, Czerwinski S A, Carey K D, Rice K, Rogers J
Department of Genetics, Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research, San Antonio, TX 78245-0549, USA.
Bone. 2003 Dec;33(6):877-88. doi: 10.1016/s8756-3282(03)00231-x.
Osteoporosis is a progressive condition involving structural deterioration of bone tissue, leading to skeletal fragility and an increased susceptibility to fractures due to low bone mass and high rates of bone turnover. Areal bone mineral density (aBMD) serves as the most reliable predictor of susceptibility to osteoporotic fracture. The development of animal models, including Old World Monkeys, has been essential to studies of bone mineral density. These animals, including the baboon, exhibit many biological similarities with our own species relevant to the variation in age-related changes and pathology in bone that may make them an excellent model for studies of skeletal structure and maintenance in humans. The baboon has been shown to exhibit extensive biological similarities to humans regarding skeletal biology, but little is known about the range of normal variation in skeletal traits, such as bone mineral density, in this species. Our data, collected on baboons (Papio hamadryas) that are part of a large breeding colony at the Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research and the Southwest National Primate Research Center (San Antonio, TX), involve 466 females and 210 males, ranging in age from 5.5 to 30 years. Student's t tests, bivariate correlations, and likelihood ratio tests show sex and age effects at all spinal sites. Age effects are minimal or absent in the forearm sites. This study is the first to characterize normal variation in aBMD in baboons, to assess the effect of age and sex on this variation, and to compare this variation to those data currently available from experimental control animals. As such, it provides much-needed reference standards that will allow researchers to evaluate the status of their animals in cross-sectional studies and more fully assess the meaning of aBMD changes in longitudinal studies.
骨质疏松症是一种进行性疾病,涉及骨组织的结构恶化,由于骨量低和骨转换率高,导致骨骼脆弱,骨折易感性增加。面积骨密度(aBMD)是骨质疏松性骨折易感性最可靠的预测指标。包括旧世界猴在内的动物模型的开发对于骨密度研究至关重要。这些动物,包括狒狒,在与年龄相关变化和骨骼病理学差异相关的方面与我们人类有许多生物学相似性,这可能使它们成为研究人类骨骼结构和维持的优秀模型。已证明狒狒在骨骼生物学方面与人类具有广泛的生物学相似性,但对于该物种骨骼特征(如骨密度)的正常变异范围知之甚少。我们收集的数据来自西南生物医学研究基金会和西南国家灵长类动物研究中心(德克萨斯州圣安东尼奥)大型繁殖群体中的狒狒(阿拉伯狒狒),涉及466只雌性和210只雄性,年龄在5.5岁至30岁之间。学生t检验、双变量相关性分析和似然比检验显示,在所有脊柱部位均存在性别和年龄效应。在前臂部位,年龄效应最小或不存在。本研究首次描述了狒狒aBMD的正常变异,评估了年龄和性别对这种变异的影响,并将这种变异与目前来自实验对照动物的数据进行了比较。因此,它提供了急需的参考标准,使研究人员能够在横断面研究中评估其动物的状态,并在纵向研究中更全面地评估aBMD变化的意义。