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  • Title: The actions of parathyroid hormone on bone: relation to bone remodeling and turnover, calcium homeostasis, and metabolic bone disease. Part I of IV parts: mechanisms of calcium transfer between blood and bone and their cellular basis: morphological and kinetic approaches to bone turnover.
    Author: Parfitt AM.
    Journal: Metabolism; 1976 Jul; 25(7):809-44. PubMed ID: 781470.
    Abstract:
    The supracellular organization of living bone enables the study of isolated cellular and subcellular systems to be related to the study of the whole organism. Bone is formed by osteoblasts in successive stages, separated in both time and space, of matrix formation and primary mineralization. Osteoblasts are joined by tight junctions and largely cover the osteoid seam which separates them from mineralized bone. Secondary mineralization is not completed for several months and is not regulated by the osteoblast. Bone is resorbed by osteoclasts which simultaneously accomplish mineral dissolution and matrix digestion. Active osteoblasts occupy about 5% of the free bone surface, osteoid seams with less active osteoblasts about 10%, active osteoclasts about 0.5%, and Howship's lacunae at which bone remodeling is either quiescent or arrested about 5%. The remaining 80% of the free bone surface is covered by a leaky envelope of thin flattened cells, termed surface osteocytes. Some osteoblasts become permanently buried in the bone as deep osteocytes, around which a specialized and metabolically active perilacunar bone is formed. This bone is less highly mineralized and can temporarily lose or gain calcium in accordance with homeostatic needs. Deep osteocytes maintain contact with each other and with the surface osteocytes, their cell processes within canaliculi being joined by gap junctions. Remodeling of cortical bone proceeds with the excavation by osteoclasts of a longitudinal tunnel which is refilled by osteoblasts to form a new osteon. The anatomically discrete longitudinally oriented structure consisting of a cutting cone of osteoclasts in front and a closing cone of osteoblasts behind is termed a cortical remodeling unit. The events of centrifugal resorption and centripetal formation which occur in a single cross section is termed a cortical remodeling cycle. Normally each new cycle is slightly out of phase with its predecessor. The quantities which characterize cortical remodeling are the birth rate of new remodeling cycles or activation frequency (mu), and the durations of the resorptive period (sigma r), the quiescent interval (sigma q) and the formation period (sigma f). The average distances traveled by the osteoclast and osteoblast are indicated respectively by the mean cement line diameter and mean wall thickness of completed osteons. These quantities show little interindividual variation. Because of this constancy the magnitude of bone turnover (the bone formation rate) is almost entirely a function of mu, the activation frequency of new remodeling cycles. Variations in the velocity of advance of osteoclasts (the linear resorption rate) or of osteoblasts (the appositional rate) alter inversely both the extent of surface engaged in resorption or formation and the time taken to replace a particular moiety of bone, but in a steady state do not influence the rate of turnover of the skeleton as a whole...
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