Author:
Suntornsaratoon Panan,Thongklam Thachakorn,Saetae Thaweechai,Kodmit Buapuengporn,Lapmanee Sarawut,Malaivijitnond Suchinda,Charoenphandhu Narattaphol,Krishnamra Nateetip
Abstract
AbstractInadequate calcium intake during childhood and adolescence is detrimental to bone metabolism. Here, we postulated that calcium supplement prepared from tuna bone with tuna head oil should benefit for skeletal development than CaCO3. Forty female 4-week-old rats were divided into calcium-replete diet (0.55% w/w, S1, n = 8) and low-calcium groups (0.15% w/w for 2 weeks; L; n = 32). Then L were subdivided into 4 groups (8/group), i.e., remained on L, L + tuna bone (S2), S2 + tuna head oil + 25(OH)D3 and S2 + 25(OH)D3. Bone specimens were collected at week 9. We found that 2 weeks on low calcium diet led to low bone mineral density (BMD), reduced mineral content, and impaired mechanical properties in young growing rats. Intestinal fractional calcium absorption also increased, presumably resulting from higher plasma 1,25(OH)2D3 (1.712 ± 0.158 in L vs. 1.214 ± 0.105 nM in S1, P < 0.05). Four-week calcium supplementation from tuna bone further increased calcium absorption efficacy, which later returned to the basal level by week 9. Calcium supplementation successfully restored BMD, bone strength and microstructure. However, 25(OH)D3 + tuna head oil + tuna bone showed no additive effect. Voluntary running also effectively prevented bone defects. In conclusion, both tuna bone calcium supplementation and exercise are effective interventions for mitigating calcium-deficient bone loss.
Funder
National Science Research and Innovation Fund
Board of Investment of Thailand and Thai Union Public Company Limited
Central Instrument Facility (CIF), Faculty of Science, Mahidol University.
Science Achievement Scholarship of Thailand
National Research Council of Thailand (NRCT) and Mahidol University
Mahidol University–Frontier Research Facility (MU-FRF) and MUSC–Central Animal Facility
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
2 articles.
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