Journal of Aging Research (Jan 2012)

Low-Dose, Ionizing Radiation and Age-Related Changes in Skeletal Microarchitecture

  • Joshua S. Alwood,
  • Akhilesh Kumar,
  • Luan H. Tran,
  • Angela Wang,
  • Charles L. Limoli,
  • Ruth K. Globus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/481983
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2012

Abstract

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Osteoporosis can profoundly affect the aged as a consequence of progressive bone loss; high-dose ionizing radiation can cause similar changes, although less is known about lower doses (≤100 cGy). We hypothesized that exposure to relatively low doses of gamma radiation accelerates structural changes characteristic of skeletal aging. Mice (C57BL/6J-10 wk old, male) were irradiated (total body; 0-sham, 1, 10 or 100 cGy 137Cs) and tissues harvested on the day of irradiation, 1 or 4 months later. Microcomputed tomography was used to quantify microarchitecture of high turnover, cancellous bone. Irradiation at 100 cGy caused transient microarchitectural changes over one month that were only evident at longer times in controls (4 months). Ex vivo bone cell differentiation from the marrow was unaffected by gamma radiation. In conclusion, acute ionizing gamma irradiation at 100 cGy (but not at 1 cGy or 10 cGy) exacerbated microarchitectural changes normally found during progressive, postpubertal aging prior to the onset of age-related osteoporosis.