Title of article
Histomorphometric and biochemical study of osteoclasts at orthodontic compression sites in the rat during indomethacin inhibition
Author/Authors
Zhou، نويسنده , , D. and Hughes، نويسنده , , B. and King، نويسنده , , G.J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages
10
From page
717
To page
726
Abstract
Prostaglandins affect the numbers of osteoclasts at compression sites in orthodontic tooth movement. They may also have a role in tooth movement and influence the extent of root resorption. The purpose was to examine the effect of indomethacin on the activity of resident osteoclasts, recruitment of new osteoclasts and root resorption at orthodontic compression sites. Two separate populations of osteoclasts were studied: those resident at the sites after initial appliance activation and those recruited by a subsequent activation. Orthodontic appliances were activated to provide mesially directed forces of 40 g on the maxillary molars of rats. The appliances were activated with the same force after 4 days. The rats were killed at 1, 3, 6 and 10 days after initial activation. Half of the rats were injected with indomethacin. Tooth movement was measured cephalometrically; osteoclast numbers, sizes, numbers of nuclei per osteoclast and root resorption were assessed histomorphometrically; tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) in alveolar bone was measured biochemically. Indomethacin inhibited both initial tooth displacement and that following the delay. It also reduced the increase in osteoclast numbers, total osteoclast surface and alveolar bone TRAP at day 10. It had no effect on the surface area of each individual osteoclast or number of nuclei in each osteoclast. Root resorption increased in both groups but it was enhanced at day 10 in the indomethacin group. These data suggest that orthodontic tooth movement after appliance activation requires the recruitment of osteoclasts to sites of compression and that this is indomethacin-sensitive. Furthermore, indomethacin enhances root resorption at compression sites 10 days after appliance reactivation.
Keywords
Indomethacin , prostaglandins , Alveolar bone , Orthodontic tooth movement , Osteoclasts , Histomorphometry
Journal title
Archives of Oral Biology
Serial Year
1997
Journal title
Archives of Oral Biology
Record number
1799594
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