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      Effect of zinc-containing β-tricalcium phosphate nano particles injection on jawbone mineral density and mechanical strength of osteoporosis model rats.

      Biological & pharmaceutical bulletin
      Animals, Body Weight, drug effects, Bone Density, Bone Density Conservation Agents, administration & dosage, pharmacology, therapeutic use, Bone Resorption, prevention & control, Calcium Phosphates, Deficiency Diseases, complications, drug therapy, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Femur, Injections, Jaw, metabolism, Nanoparticles, Osteogenesis, Osteoporosis, Ovariectomy, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Stress, Mechanical, Zinc

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          Abstract

          Zinc-containing β-tricalcium phosphate (ZnTCP) nano particles were injected into zinc-deficient rats to promote osteogenesis. Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats (4 weeks old, average weight of 70 g) were divided into four groups: Normal rats (not ovariectomized (OVX)), Control rats (OVX), and OVX rats injected with a suspension of ZnTCP nano particles or ZnSO(4). The ZnTCP contained 6.17% zinc. The suspensions (0.6 mg as a zinc volume/0.2 ml) were injected around the jaw bone once a week for 12 weeks. Local effects on the bone mineral content (BMC) of jawbone, and systemic effects on body weight, the BMC of both femurs determined by X-ray computed tomography, and bone mechanical strength (BMS) measured by the three-point bending method, were examined. The BMC of jaw bone was significantly higher in the ZnTCP-treated group than un-treated or ZnSO(4)-treated group. Body weight, the BMC of femurs, and BMS were also significantly higher in the ZnTCP treated-group. The zinc-containing β-tricalcium phosphate nano particles were effective at preventing bone loss induced by ovariectomy in rats and have potential uses for treating periodontitis.

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