Journal of Applied Physiology
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J Appl Physiol 105: 334-341, 2008. First published April 17, 2008; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00040.2008
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INVITED REVIEW

HIGHLIGHTED TOPIC
Biology of Physical Activity in Youth

Physical activity and bone development during childhood: insights from animal models

Mark R. Forwood

School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Animal studies illustrate greater structural and material adaptations of growing bone to exercise than in adult bones but do not define effective training regimes to optimize bone strength in children. Controlled loading studies in turkey, rat, or mouse bones have revealed mechanisms of mechanotransduction and loading characteristics that optimize the modeling response to applied strains. Insights from these models reveal that static loads do not play a role in mechanotransduction and that bone formation is threshold driven and dependent on strain rate, amplitude, and partitioning of the load. That is, only a few cycles of loading are required at any time to elicit an adaptive response, and distributed bouts of loading, incorporating rest periods, are more osteogenic than single sessions of long duration. These parameters of loading have been translated into feasible public health interventions that exploit the insights gained from animal experiments to achieve adaptive responses in children and adolescents. Studies manipulating estrogen receptors (ER) in mice also demonstrate that skeletal sensitivity to loading during the peripubertal period is due to a direct regulation of mechanotransduction pathways by ER, and not just a simple enhancement of cell activity already marshaled by the hypothalamic-pituitary axis. Unfortunately, because the rate and timing of growth in small animals are completely different from those in humans, these models can be poor tools to elucidate periods during growth in youths, during which the skeleton is more sensitive to loading. However, there are insights from studies of human growth that can improve the interpretation of data from such studies of growth and development in animals.

growth; exercise; maturation; mechanotransduction



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. R. Forwood, School of Biomedical Sciences, Dept. of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, The Univ. of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia (e-mail: m.forwood{at}uq.edu.au)




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