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Title: Periosteal microcirculatory reactions in a zoledronate-induced osteonecrosis model of the jaw in rats. Author: Janovszky Á, Szabó A, Varga R, Garab D, Boros M, Mester C, Beretka N, Zombori T, Wiesmann HP, Bernhardt R, Ocsovszki I, Balázs P, Piffkó J. Journal: Clin Oral Investig; 2015 Jul; 19(6):1279-88. PubMed ID: 25352470. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: Nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates induce osteonecrosis mostly in the jaw and less frequently in other bones. Because of the crucial role of periosteal perfusion in bone repair, we investigated zoledronate-induced microcirculatory reactions in the mandibular periosteum in comparison with those in the tibia in a clinically relevant model of bisphosphonate-induced medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw (MRONJ). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sprague-Dawley rats were treated with zoledronate (ZOL; 80 i.v. μg/kg/week over 8 weeks) or saline vehicle. The first two right mandibular molar teeth were extracted after 3 weeks. Various systemic and local (periosteal) microcirculatory inflammatory parameters were examined by intravital videomicroscopy after 9 weeks. RESULTS: Gingival healing disorders (∼100%) and MRONJ developed in 70% of ZOL-treated cases but not after saline (shown by micro-CT). ZOL induced significantly higher degrees of periosteal leukocyte rolling and adhesion in the mandibular postcapillary venules (at both extraction and intact sites) than at the tibia. Leukocyte NADPH-oxidase activity was reduced; leukocyte CD11b and plasma TNF-alpha levels were unchanged. CONCLUSION: Chronic ZOL treatment causes a distinct microcirculatory inflammatory reaction in the mandibular periosteum but not in the tibia. The local reaction in the absence of augmented systemic leukocyte inflammatory activity suggests that topically different, endothelium-specific changes may play a critical role in the pathogenesis of MRONJ. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: This model permits for the first time to explore the microvascular processes in the mandibular periosteum after chronic ZOL treatment. This approach may contribute to a better understanding of the pathomechanism and the development of strategies to counteract bisphosphonate-induced side effects.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]