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Ischemic stroke reduces bone perfusion and alters osteovascular structure.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Hanne, NJ; Steward, AJ; Geeroms, C; Easter, ED; Gensch, HT; Kerckhofs, G; Parac-Vogt, TN; Sheng, H; Cole, JH
Published in: Bone Rep
March 2025

Stroke patients lose bone mass and experience fracture at an elevated rate. Although functional intraosseous vasculature is necessary for skeletal maintenance, the effect of stroke on osteovasculature is unknown. In this study we characterized changes to osteovascular perfusion, structure, and composition following mild-to-moderate stroke severity in mice, both with and without exercise therapy. Twelve-week-old male mice (n = 27) received either an ischemic stroke (middle cerebral artery occlusion) or sham procedure, followed by a four-week recovery with either moderate daily treadmill or sedentary activity. Intraosseous perfusion, measured weekly in the proximal tibial metaphysis with laser Doppler flowmetry, was reduced for two weeks in the stroke group relative to the sham group. After four weeks, osteovascular structure was assessed in the distal femoral metaphysis with contrast-enhanced computed tomography. Increased osteovascular volume and branching, decreased number of smaller vessels (6-22 μm), and increased number of larger vessels (>66 μm) were observed in the stroke groups compared to sham groups, which may be a compensatory response to early perfusion deficits. Although moderate exercise mitigated the impact of stroke on osteovascular perfusion and volume, it tended to reduce the amount of osteogenic type H vasculature quantified with immunofluorescence microscopy and, exacerbated by stroke effects, produced fewer vessels in close proximity to bone and thus may have detrimental effects on bone remodeling during early stroke recovery. Since results were similar in both limbs, the effects of ischemic stroke on osteovascular perfusion and structure were primarily systemic, rather than resulting from paresis or disuse, providing new insight for future studies on the pathogenesis and treatment of skeletal fragility in stroke patients.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Bone Rep

DOI

ISSN

2352-1872

Publication Date

March 2025

Volume

24

Start / End Page

101824

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • 3202 Clinical sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Hanne, N. J., Steward, A. J., Geeroms, C., Easter, E. D., Gensch, H. T., Kerckhofs, G., … Cole, J. H. (2025). Ischemic stroke reduces bone perfusion and alters osteovascular structure. Bone Rep, 24, 101824. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bonr.2025.101824
Hanne, Nicholas J., Andrew J. Steward, Carla Geeroms, Elizabeth D. Easter, Hannah T. Gensch, Greet Kerckhofs, Tatjana N. Parac-Vogt, Huaxin Sheng, and Jacqueline H. Cole. “Ischemic stroke reduces bone perfusion and alters osteovascular structure.Bone Rep 24 (March 2025): 101824. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bonr.2025.101824.
Hanne NJ, Steward AJ, Geeroms C, Easter ED, Gensch HT, Kerckhofs G, et al. Ischemic stroke reduces bone perfusion and alters osteovascular structure. Bone Rep. 2025 Mar;24:101824.
Hanne, Nicholas J., et al. “Ischemic stroke reduces bone perfusion and alters osteovascular structure.Bone Rep, vol. 24, Mar. 2025, p. 101824. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.bonr.2025.101824.
Hanne NJ, Steward AJ, Geeroms C, Easter ED, Gensch HT, Kerckhofs G, Parac-Vogt TN, Sheng H, Cole JH. Ischemic stroke reduces bone perfusion and alters osteovascular structure. Bone Rep. 2025 Mar;24:101824.
Journal cover image

Published In

Bone Rep

DOI

ISSN

2352-1872

Publication Date

March 2025

Volume

24

Start / End Page

101824

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • 3202 Clinical sciences