Transition of endochondral bone formation at the normal and botulinum-treated mandibular condyle of growing juvenile rat

Hye Jin Tak, Joo Won Moon, Jae Young Kim, Sang Hoon Kang, Sang Hwy Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: The aim of this study was to understand the temporal and spatial distribution of canonical endochondral ossification (CEO) and non-canonical endochondral ossification (NCEO) of the normal growing rat condyle, and to evaluate their histomorphological changes following the simultaneous hypotrophy of the unilateral masticatory closing muscles with botulinum toxin (BTX). Design: 46 rats at postnatal 4 weeks were used for the experiment and euthanized at postnatal 4, 8, and 16 weeks. The right masticatory muscles of rats in experimental group were injected with BTX, the left being injected with saline as a control. The samples were evaluated using 3D morphometric, histological, and immunohistochemical analysis with three-dimensional regional mapping of endochondral ossifications. Results: The results showed that condylar endochondral ossification changed from CEO to NCEO at the main articulating surface during the experimental period and that the BTX-treated condyle presented a retroclined smaller condyle with an anteriorly-shifted narrower articulating surface. This articulating region showed a thinner layer of the endochondral cells, and a compact distribution of flattened cells. These were related to the load concentration, decreased cellular proliferation with thin cellular layers, reduced extracellular matrix, increased cellular differentiation toward the osteoblastic bone formation, and accelerated transition of the ossification types from CEO to NCEO. Conclusion: The results suggest that endochondral ossification under loading tended to show more NCEO, and that masticatory muscular hypofunction by BTX had deleterious effects on endochondral bone formation and changed the condylar growth vector, resulting in a retroclined, smaller, asymmetrical, and deformed condyle with thin cartilage.

Original languageEnglish
Article number105999
JournalArchives of Oral Biology
Volume164
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2024

Keywords

  • Bone formation
  • Botulinum toxins
  • Canonical
  • Condyle
  • Endochondral
  • Flattened cell
  • Mandible
  • Masticatory muscle

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