Vol. 93, Issue 3, 1152-1158, September 2002
Effects of tower climbing exercise on bone mass, strength,
and turnover in orchidectomized growing rats
Takuya
Notomi1,
Yuichi
Okazaki2,
Nobukazu
Okimoto2,
Yuri
Tanaka1,
Toshitaka
Nakamura2, and
Masashige
Suzuki1
1 Laboratory and Biochemistry of Exercise and
Nutrition, Institute of Health and Sport Sciences, University of
Tsukuba, Tsukuba 305-8574; and 2 Department of
Orthopedic Surgery, University of Occupational and Environmental
Health, Kitakyushu 807-8555, Japan
To determine the effects of a
tower climbing exercise on mass, strength, and local turnover of bone,
70 9-wk-old Sprague-Dawley rats were assigned to seven groups: a
baseline control and three groups of sham-operated sedentary,
orchidectomized (ORX)-sedentary and ORX-exercise rats. Rats voluntarily
climbed a 200-cm tower to drink water from a bottle set at the top. At
4 wk, the periosteal bone formation rate (BFR), moment of inertia, bone
mineral content, bone mineral density, and bending load at the midfemur
were maintained in ORX-exercise rats, whereas these parameters were
reduced in ORX-sedentary rats. At 8 wk, the periosteal mineral
apposition rate and BFR in ORX-exercise rats were significantly higher,
whereas the parameters in ORX-sedentary rats did not differ compared
with sham-sedentary rats. In ORX-exercise rats, the trabecular
mineralizing surface, BFR, and bone volume of the lumbar vertebrae were
maintained at the same levels as those in the sham-sedentary group,
whereas the osteoclast surface decreased compared with the
ORX-sedentary group. However, the climbing exercise did not affect bone
mineral content, bone mineral density, or the compression load of the lumbar vertebrae. These results show that, in the midfemur, the voluntary climbing exercise maintained cortical bone mass and strength
by stimulating periosteal bone formation and partially prevented
ORX-induced trabecular bone loss, depressing the elevation of turnover.
Interestingly, in ORX rats, the climbing exercise had the opposite
effect on bone formation at the periosteal femoral cortical bone, where
the exercise increased the bone formation compared with vertebral
trabecular bone, where the exercise decreased it.
voluntarily exercise; bone formation; osteoclast; orchidectomy