Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0005940 (bone disease)
7,459 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors treated 18 patients with Paget's disease of bone (12 men and 6 women, age 65 +/- 5 years) with pamidronate (bisphosphonate of the second generation). Three patients from this group were treated previously without success with calcitonin or bisphosphonate of the first generation (etidronate) 50% of the patients suffered from the polyostotic form of the disease. In one patient a rare combination of primary hyperparathyroidism with Paget's bone disease was found and in another patient later an osteosarcoma developed in the affected bone. To all patients sodium pamidronate was administered (Aredia, Ciba-Geigy) 30 mg per day by i.v. infusion for 2 hours during three days. Four patients developed fever, two patients phlebitis at the site of injection. These side-effects are described by the manufacturer. Two patients developed transient regional alopecia, not described so far. Subjective pain relief of the affected skeleton occurred in one patient after one month of treatment, after three months in 78%. Laboratory manifestations of activity of the disease (serum activity of alkaline phosphatase, tartrate resistant acid phosphatase and hydroxyprolinuria) declined gradually from the 1st to the 6th month after onset of treatment. There was a less marked decline of the osteocalcin serum concentration. The concentration of calcium, phosphorus and vitamin D metabolites did not change markedly. Twelve months after treatment 14.7% of the patients were inactive according to laboratory tests, 73% however experienced another rise of parameters of osteoresorption and osteoformation. Pamidronate treatment in patients with Paget's disease of bone is effective and safe.
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PMID:[Paget's disease of bone and treatment with pamidronate]. 837 65

Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) are differentiative factors whose principal function is to induce transformation of undifferentiated mesenchymal cells into chondroblasts and osteoblasts in a dose-dependent manner. Bone morphogenetic proteins have been isolated postnatally in mammals from bone matrix, periosteal cells, mesenchymal cells of marrow stroma, tooth analagen, and cells of osteosarcoma and chondrosarcoma. Distribution in additional embryonic tissues implies a broader organogenic function. Bone morphogenetic proteins are the only differentiative factors able to singularly induce de novo bone formation in vitro and in vivo. Recombinant DNA technology allows their production in large and highly purified quantities. The BMPs' osteoinductive ability has been shown with a variety of carriers including collagens and polymers at heterotopic and orthotopic sites in a wide range of species. They are presently being readied for clinical use as alternatives to bone grafts. Other potential applications include use as pulp capping agents, promoters of implant osteointegration and soft tissue reunion with bone, treatments for nonadaptive bone disease, and implants for use with mitotically expanded skeletal stem cell populations. Errors in the genetic coding of BMPs may manifest as clinical disease entities.
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PMID:Recombinant bone morphogenetic proteins: novel substances for enhancing bone healing. 858 49

We have previously established a rat model of chronic uremia, which is suitable to investigate the effect of various treatment modalities on renal osteodystrophy [1]. After four months subsequent to 5/6 nephrectomy, some animals were treated by gavage for 9 weeks with tap water (controls), or with aluminium (Al-citrate) 3 x 25 mg/week/kg b.wt +/- subsequent deferoxamine (DFO) 3 x 50 mg/week/kg b.wt. for 4 weeks. At termination of the study, serum clinical chemistry, femoral chemical composition and mechanical properties, calvarial parathyroid hormone (PTH)-elicited adenylate cyclase (AC) and phospholipase C (PLC) activities, cross-sectional femoral area, as well as bone histomorphometry, were analyzed. Animals given Al displayed moderately enhanced serum Al and bone Al accumulation, however, DFO-treatment did not fully alleviate bone Al retainment. A small increase in serum PTH was seen in all animals rendered uremic. Furthermore, a marked fall in serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) below normal controls was observed in Al +/- DFO-treated animals compared with uremic controls. The uremic condition led to reduced femoral ratios of hydroxyproline (HYP) over Ca(2+) and phosphate (P(i)), while Al-intoxication alone enhanced femoral Hyp contents above values seen for normal controls. The protracted ureamia caused a deterioration of long bone resilience and brittleness, however, Al +/- DFO-treatment seemed to normalize the latter. Contrastingly, Al +/- DFO-gavage enhanced time to fracture. Uremic rats intoxicated with Al showed a complete loss of calvarial PTH-sensitive AC and PLC activities. DFO-treatment normalized PTH-elicited PLC, while PTH-susceptible AC remained super-normal. Al apparently exerts a long term down-regulation of both PTH-sensitive signaling systems as evidenced by studies of rat UMR 106 osteosarcoma cells in culture. The uremic condition enhanced endosteal bone resorption as shown by femoral shaft dimension analysis, while Al +/- DFO-treatment insignificantly reversed the condition. Finally, histomorphometrical analyses showed that DFO-administration tended to normalize aberrant trabecular bone volume, while rectifying both bone resorption and degree of mineralization. In conclusion, we assert that Al-intoxication hampers both processes (i.e. formation and resorption) of bone turnover, and that DFO-treatment to a certain extent prevents the uremia- and Al-induced bone disease in rats.
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PMID:Aluminium-induced bone disease in uremic rats: effect of deferoxamine. 886 40

Paget disease of bone, or "osteitis deformans," is a bone disorder characterized by rapid bone remodeling resulting in abnormal bone formation. It is the second most common metabolic bone disease after osteoporosis, affecting 3%-5% of subjects aged >40 years. Recent evidence suggests that predisposition to Paget disease may have a genetic component. Genetic linkage analysis of families with multigenerational Paget disease shows linkage to a region of chromosome 18q near the polymorphic locus D18S42. Approximately 1% of Paget patients develop osteosarcoma, which represents an increase in risk that is several thousandfold over that of the general population. Osteosarcoma in Paget patients is the underlying basis for a significant fraction of osteosarcomas occurring after age 60 years. Our analysis of tumor-specific loss of constitutional heterozygosity (LOH) in 96 sporadic osteosarcomas has identified a putative tumor-suppressor locus that maps to chromosome 18q. We have localized this tumor-suppressor locus between D18S60 and D18S42, a region tightly linked to familial Paget disease. Analysis of osteosarcomas from patients with Paget disease revealed that these tumors also undergo LOH in this region. These findings suggest that the association between Paget disease and osteosarcoma is the result of a single gene or two tightly linked genes on chromosome 18.
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PMID:Evidence for a novel osteosarcoma tumor-suppressor gene in the chromosome 18 region genetically linked with Paget disease of bone. 971 49

Lymphocytes are implicated in the pathogenesis of bone disease in chronic inflammation, osteoporosis, transplantation and osteopetrosis. The effects of lymphocytes and lymphocyte-conditioned medium on bone-resorbing activity and osteoclast function have been well studied, but there are few studies of the effects of LCM on bone formation and osteoblast function. The effects of LCM on the function of the MG-63 human osteosarcoma cell line were studied, which, when stimulated with 1,25-(OH)2D3, demonstrates many of the properties of the mature human osteoblast. Lymphocytes contain oestrogen receptors and the model was also used to test the hypothesis that the effects of oestrogen on bone cells may be mediated indirectly via lymphokines. Lymphokines were measured by ELISA in human lymphocyte conditioned medium (LCM) collected following incubation of mixed lymphocytes with or without stimulation for 72 h. Unstimulated LCM increased proliferation of MG-63 cells and this increase was not affected by neutralization of interleukin 1 (IL-1), IL-3, IL-6, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), tumour necrosis factor (TNF), lymphotoxin alpha, or interferon gamma (IFN-gamma). Phytohaemagglutinin-stimulated LCM decreased proliferation of MG-63 cells, as well as induced expression of IL-6 mRNA, increased alkaline phosphatase production, and inhibited osteocalcin production. The decrease in proliferation was abolished by neutralization of IFN-gamma but was unaffected by neutralization of IL-1, IL-2, IL-3, IL-4, IL-6, GM-CSF, TNF, or lymphotoxin alpha. Neutralization of IFN-gamma in stimulated LCM also partially inhibited the increase in alkaline phosphatase production but had no effects on the decrease in osteocalcin production. Although oestrogen inhibited lymphocyte proliferation, the effects of LCM collected from lymphocytes in the presence of oestrogen on MG-63 cell proliferation and function was no different than the effects of LCM collected in the absence of oestrogen. LCM has multiple effects on MG-63 cell function and gene expression. Lymphocyte stimulation during the preparation of LCM further modulates these effects. Although partially mediated by IFN-gamma, the effects of LCM on these cells cannot be completely explained by individual component lymphokines. This may have implications for understanding the pathophysiology of bone loss in inflammatory disorders as well as possible feedback loops of locally generated cytokines in bone.
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PMID:Effects of human lymphocyte-conditioned medium on MG-63 human osteosarcoma cell function. 972 33

Osteosarcoma is a fatal disease. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy combined with irradiation treatment provide a better survival. In the Faculty of Medicine, Ramathibodi Hospital, the overall 9 year survival probability was 55 per cent among 130 cases of more than Enneking stage II osteosarcoma. Between 15 cases of bony metastases, there were 2 cases which were classified as multifoci osteosarcoma or osteosarcomatosis. These two cases developed second bone disease, 32 and 38 months after initial diagnosis and survived for 84 and 88 months with one patient also developing pulmonary metastasis. Both of them are still alive and in very good health.
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PMID:7 year-survival of 2 cases of multicentric or metastatic osteosarcoma. 973 34

Multiple myeloma is associated with unbalanced bone remodeling causing lytic bone lesions. Interleukin-11 (IL-11) promotes osteoclast formation and inhibits osteoblast activity and may, thus, be one factor involved in cancer-induced bone destruction. We have previously shown that myeloma cells produce hepatocyte growth factor (HGF). We now report that HGF induces IL-11 secretion from human osteoblast-like cells and from the osteosarcoma cell lines Saos-2 and HOS. In coculture experiments, both the myeloma cell line JJN-3 and primary myeloma cells from 3 patients induced IL-11 secretion from osteoblasts, whereas no induction was observed with the non-HGF producing myeloma cell line OH-2. Enhanced IL-11 induction was observed with physical contact between osteoblasts and myeloma cells as compared with experiments in which contact was prohibited by tissue inserts. Anti-HGF serum strongly reduced the myeloma cell-induced IL-11 secretion. Furthermore, we show that JJN-3 cells express HGF on the cell-surface. Removal of surface-bound HGF on JJN-3 cells reduced IL-11 production induced in cocultures. Transforming growth factor beta1 and IL-1 potentiated the effect of HGF on IL-11 secretion, whereas an additive effect was observed with tumor necrosis factor. Thus, myeloma-derived HGF can influence the bone marrow environment both as a soluble and a surface-bound factor. Furthermore, HGF emerges as a possible factor involved in myeloma bone disease by its ability to induce IL-11.
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PMID:Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) induces interleukin-11 secretion from osteoblasts: a possible role for HGF in myeloma-associated osteolytic bone disease. 1057 4

Paget's disease of bone (PDB) is one of the most common bone disorders in the western world. PDB is characterized by focal areas of increased osteoclastic bone resorption and bone formation, which leads to the formation of poorly structured bone. These abnormalities of bone turnover and structure predispose affected individuals to various complications including bone pain, deformity, pathological fracture, and an increased risk of osteosarcoma. One of the main mechanisms of osteoclast formation and activation involves the receptor activator of nuclear factor -kappaB (RANK)/RANK ligand (RANKL)/osteoprotegerin (OPG) pathway, where binding of RANKL to RANK results in the differentiation of osteoclast precursors. OPG, on the other hand, acts as an inhibitor of osteoclastogenesis by serving as a decoy receptor for RANKL. Recently, mutations in the RANK gene have been shown to cause familial expansile osteolysis, a rare bone disorder showing great similarity to PDB. We performed mutation analysis in the RANK and OPG genes in 28 PDB patients to investigate whether mutations in these genes could be responsible for PDB. Our data suggest that RANK is not directly involved in PDB in our set of patients, as no mutations in the RANK coding region could be identified and allele frequencies of RANK polymorphisms did not differ in PDB patients as compared with the random population. Also, in the OPG gene, we could not detect PDB-causing mutations. However, of the several polymorphisms identified, one (400 + 4 C/T in intron 2), showed a statistically significant increased frequency for the C allele in PDB patients, suggesting that individuals harboring this allele may be more susceptible for developing PDB.
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PMID:Evaluation of the role of RANK and OPG genes in Paget's disease of bone. 1116 49

Novel imaging of the fine structures of the ribs of a pig and a specimen of human osteosarcoma utilizing the spatial coherence of X-rays was successfully performed with an incident X-ray energy of 30 keV at SPring-8, Japan. The image contrast appearing at the periphery of trabecular bone, small calcifications and small fractures is caused by the phase shift of the X-rays at the boundary of these objects that have different X-ray refractive indices. The image is recorded on mammography film without an intensifying screen. Comparison of the image contrast using different sample-to-film distances, Z, such as Z = 5 m and Z approximately 0 m, showed that the former images were always more informative, i.e. better in resolution and/or image contrast when imaging trabecular bone, bone marrow and small fractures in compact bone, and for imaging cartilage. Radiography using synchrotron X-rays for phase objects should be a powerful tool for diagnosis in orthopedics, especially for bone disease.
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PMID:Application of synchrotron X-ray imaging to phase objects in orthopedics. 1197 68

Fibrous dysplasia is a rare bone disease that can be misdiagnosed because of the slowness of its symptoms. Although it is a benign disease its clinical behaviour can be severe, with possibility of local growth and malignant degeneration into osteosarcoma. An uncommon case of fibrous dysplasia is reported, affecting only the middle turbinate. Diagnostic and therapeutic problems are discussed.
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PMID:[An exceptional form of cranio-facial fibrous dysplasia: fibrous dysplasia of middle turbinate]. 1218 6


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