Journal article

Low-intensity pulsed ultrasound stimulates a bone-forming response in UMR-106 cells

SJ Warden, JM Favaloro, KL Bennell, JM McMeeken, KW Ng, JD Zajac, JD Wark

Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE | Published : 2001

Abstract

Low-intensity (<100 mW/cm2) pulsed ultrasound (US) is an established therapy for fracture repair. In both animal and human trials, such US has been shown to facilitate fresh fracture repair and initiate healing in fractures with repair defects. However, the mechanism by which US achieves these outcomes is not clear. One possible mechanism is the direct stimulation of bone formation. To investigate this hypothesis, the current study investigated the mRNA response of isolated bone-forming cells (UMR-106 cells) to a single 20-min dose of low-intensity pulsed US. Using a novel US-cell coupling method, US was found to stimulate expression of the immediate-early response genes c-fos and COX-2 and ..

View full abstract