Effects of Different Types of Mechanical Loading on Trabecular Bone Microarchitecture in Rats
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Abstract
Mechanical loading is generally considered to have a positive impact on the skeleton; however, not all types of mechanical loading have the same beneficial effect. Many researchers have investigated which types of mechanical loading are more effective for improving bone mass and strength. Among the various mechanical loads, high-impact loading, such as jumping, appears to be more beneficial for bones than low-impact loadings such as walking, running, or swimming. Therefore, the different forms of mechanical loading exerted by running, swimming, and jumping exercises may have different effects on bone adaptations. However, little is known about the relationships between the types of mechanical loading and their effects on trabecular bone structure. The purpose of this article is to review the recent reports on the effects of treadmill running, jumping, and swimming on the trabecular bone microarchitecture in small animals. The effects of loading on trabecular bone architecture appear to differ among these different exercises, as several reports have shown that jumping increases the trabecular bone mass by thickening the trabeculae, whereas treadmill running and swimming add to the trabecular bone mass by increasing the trabecular number, rather than the thickness. This suggests that different types of exercise promote gains in trabecular bone mass through different architectural patterns in small animals.
INTRODUCTION
Physical exercise has generally been considered to have positive impacts on the skeleton, since the mechanical loading generated by muscle contraction and ground reaction force (GRF) stimulate bone formation. Furthermore, physical exercise can help to reduce the risk of falls that could lead to fractures or other injury by building muscle strength and improving balance. However, different types of exercise do not necessarily show equally beneficial effects. Over the last couple of decades, numerous researchers have investigated which types of exercise are more effective for improving bone mass and strength. More specifically, gymnasts, track athletes, soccer, volleyball, and basketball players who participate in weight-bearing and impact sports have higher bone mass than adolescents and adults involved in non-weight-bearing sports such as swimming.[1–5] The notion that high-impact and weight-bearing activity is more effective for bone formation than low-impact loading is thus generally accepted. Several animal studies have suggested that high-impact loading such as jumping exercise seems more beneficial for increasing bone mass and strength than low-impact loading such as running exercise.[6,7] These results suggest that higher strain rates occur with jumping activities compared with running, despite similar magnitudes of strain.[8,9] Different types of exercise thus appear to manifest differently in terms of bone adaptation.
Although considerable research has been conducted into mechanical loading and structural changes to the trabecular bone in histomorphometric studies,[6,10–12] the effects are still not completely understood. In particular, almost no research has examined the relationships between different types of exercise and structural characteristics of trabecular bone. Several previous studies using histomorphometric analyses have indicated that the increase in trabecular bone mass with resistance training is primarily due to increased trabecular thickness, whereas trabecular number was unaffected. In contrast, running exercise induced increases in trabecular bone mass by increasing the number of trabeculae. Accordingly, jumping and running exercises might exert different influences on trabecular architecture. We recently tested this hypothesis by comparing the effects of jumping and running exercises on the trabecular architecture of the distal femur in growing rats using high-resolution micro-computed tomography (micro-CT).[13] The effects on trabecular bone mass were seen to differ between jumping and running exercises. Jumping exercise increased trabecular bone mass mainly by thickening the trabeculae, whereas running exercise resulting in a greater number of trabeculae. These results support the previous finding that in vivo tibial compressive loading and running exercises improved trabecular architecture in the proximal metaphysis in different manners.[14] Considering such findings, different types of exercise appear to have different influences on trabecular bone microarchitecture. Although several studies have reported that different forms of mechanical loading might have different influences on trabecular architecture, this point has barely been discussed. Changes to the trabecular bone structure in animals are discussed in this review, particularly with regard to the 3 different exercises of treadmill running, jumping, and swimming.
CHANGES IN TRABECULAR BONE MICROSTRUCTURE UNDER SKELETAL UNLOADING
Chronic reductions in mechanical loading such as immobilization, bed rest, spinal cord injury, and exposure to microgravity are well known to precipitate generalized skeletal loss, particularly in bones that bear weight under normal conditions. To simulate and study bone changes induced under microgravity environments, Morey et al. [15] developed a model using tail suspension in 1979. This model of skeletal unloading via tail suspension has also become the gold standard to assess alterations in the skeleton during complete unloading.[16,17] In histomorphometric analyses of proximal tibias isolated from 6-week-old rats, Basso et al. [18] confirmed that 14 days of skeletal unloading by hindlimb suspension resulted in reductions of 50% to trabecular bone volume fraction, 50% to trabecular number, and 25% to trabecular thickness, and an increase of 179% to trabecular separation in the secondary spongiosa. In previous experiments with 3-dimensional (3D) micro-CT of the distal femoral metaphysis, we have also demonstrated that the decrease in bone volume induced by unloading was primarily caused by a decrease in trabecular number (−51% reduction) as opposed to a decrease in trabecular thickness (−21% reduction) for Wistar rats after 2 weeks of tail suspension.[19] Tail-suspended rats exhibited loss of trabeculae, particularly from the central zone of the femur with the loss of trabecular number, although the remaining trabeculae did not show significant differences in thickness compared with the control group (Fig. 1). These results imply that the loss of cancellous bone during 2 weeks of unloading by tail suspension is predominantly due to decreases in trabecular bone number rather than trabecular thickness. This conclusion is supported by the histomorphometric work of Bourrin et al. [20], who demonstrated that the decreased bone volume in the secondary spongiosa of the proximal tibial metaphysis after 2 weeks of tail suspension was mainly attributable to the disappearance of trabeculae (−23%) rather than a thinning of the trabeculae. Furthermore, similar findings have been confirmed in humans subjected to unloading caused by prolonged bed rest [21] and spinal cord injury.[22] As an example, Modlesky et al. [22] reported that the distal femur and proximal tibia of spinal cord-injured men showed 27% and 20% lower apparent trabecular bone volume, 21% and 20% lower apparent trabecular number, respectively, compared to able-bodied men.

Effects of hindlimb unloading on trabecular bone microarchitecture in rats. Skeletal unloading was simulated using the tail-suspended rat model. The 5-week-old male Wistar rats completed tail suspension for 2 weeks and were compared with sedentary control rats. After tail suspension for 2 weeks, to assess the 3-dimensional (3D) architecture of trabecular bone, the distal femurs were scanned using micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) and analyzed using 3D image analysis software. The tail-suspended rats exhibited a loss of trabeculae, particularly from the central zone of the femur with a loss of trabecular number, although the remaining trabeculae did not show significant differences in thickness compared to sedentary control rats.
EFFECTS OF TREADMILL RUNNING EXERCISE ON TRABECULAR BONE MICROARCHITECTURE
Both treadmill and wheel-running exercise modalities in animal models are widely used to study the physiological adaptations associated with aerobic exercise.[23–27] In particular, weight-bearing exercises such as running on a treadmill have most commonly been utilized in animal models related to bone health, as the mechanisms involved are basically comparable to those in humans running on a treadmill.[28,29] The great advantage of using treadmill running is the availability of a variety of experimental protocols by strictly controlling exercise parameters such as treadmill speed, duration, frequency, angle, and additional weight, and also the ability to set precise exercise loads. However, a wide variety of protocols for treadmills (intensity, speed, duration, inclination, frequency, time) may be reflected in different magnitudes and rates of strain on bone while exercising. As a consequence, different treadmill protocols that are used in growing, young adult, ovariectomized (OVX), and osteopenia rats could have different effects on the trabecular bone structure. In experimental animal research, numerous studies have highlighted the fact that treadmill running exercise has been demonstrated to have positive effects on the microarchitecture of the femur and/or tibia coupled with an increase in trabecular parameters (i.e., trabecular bone volume fraction, trabecular number or trabecular thickness) of the tibia or distal femoral metaphysis.[11,30–36] In contrast to those results, treadmill running exercise does not always improve the microarchitecture. Indeed, some studies have suggested that the microarchitecture of the femur and/or tibia is not modified by treadmill running exercise.[37–42] In the worst cases, running exercise even induced deterioration of trabecular parameters in the tibial proximal epiphyses and/or thoracic vertebrae.[43–45] These differences in results have been explained by methodological inconsistencies inherent to animal protocols. Some studies have reported the relationship between exercise intensity and bone mass. Overly intense running exercise (>80% of VO2max) reduces longitudinal bone growth and increases bone loss in rats,[30,43] while overly low intensity (<40% of VO2max) may not provide sufficient mechanical stimulation for bone.[46] Accordingly, exercise intensities below 40% VO2max or above 80% VO2max are recognized as not achieving improvements to bone loss in rats.[30]
A study focusing on changes to the bone microarchitecture induced by treadmill running exercise in rats was first described in 1993 by Yeh et al. [11] In that histomorphometric study, they reported that the trabecular number in the tibial metaphysis was increased in 14-month-old Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats after 16 weeks of treadmill running exercise (20 m/min, 60 min/day, 5 days/week), but trabecular thickness was unaffected. Iwamoto et al. [47] also showed that treadmill exercise (30 m/min, 60 min/day, 5 days/week for 12 weeks) in 23-week-old OVX Wistar rats improved cancellous bone mass in the proximal tibia as a result of increases in trabecular number (73%) without altering trabecular thickness. Yao et al. [33] demonstrated that treadmill exercise (12 m/min, 90 min/day, 5 days/week for 5 weeks) in 10-week-old male Wistar rats induced a 22% increase in trabecular number and a 13% increase in trabecular thickness in the tibial metaphysis compared with a sedentary control group. The results of this study were similar to those in our previous experiments with 3D micro-CT of the distal femoral metaphysis, which showed that the increase in trabecular bone mass induced by moderate treadmill exercise (30 m/min, 60 min/day, 5 days/week for 10 weeks) in 10-week-old Wistar rats was predominantly attributable to increases in trabecular number (22%), with a slight increase in trabecular thickness (8%) (Fig. 2).[31] We also showed that treadmill running exercise (25 m/min, 60 min/day, 5 days/week) during the remobilization period after suspension-induced osteopenia induced significant increases in trabecular bone mass, primarily by significant alterations in trabecular number.[48] Moreover, this finding of a predominant effect of running exercise on trabecular microarchitecture agrees with the data of Berman et al. [14], who observed that the increase in cancellous bone mass due to treadmill running (12 m/min, 30 min/day, 5 days/week, 5° incline) for 6 weeks was predominately driven by increases in trabecular number rather than the trabecular thickness of the tibial metaphysis in 8-week-old male C57B1/6J mice. Taken together, such results suggest that, in the context of growing rats and mice, moderate treadmill running exercise increases cancellous bone mass as a result of increasing growth plate-derived new bone formation, although this is not uniformly the case.[49]

Effects of treadmill running exercise on trabecular bone microarchitecture in rats. The 11-week-old male Wistar rats performed the treadmill running exercise of 30 m/min for 60 min, 5 times a week for 10 weeks. The 3-dimensional (3D) trabecular bone microarchitecture was evaluated at the distal femoral metaphysis using micro-computed tomography. Treadmill running exercise increased cancellous bone mass in the distal femurs, primarily by increasing trabecular number in growing rats.
EFFECTS OF JUMPING EXERCISE ON TRABECULAR BONE MICROARCHITECTURE
Among the various types of loading, high-impact loading is considered particularly beneficial for bones compared to low- or moderate-impact loading. Jumping exercise is the most effective physical activity to provoke an osteogenic response due to the high tension and deformity applied to the skeleton.[50,51] Upward jumping in the form of vertical jumps from the bottom to the top of a board, without GRF on landing, is widely applied as a high-impact loading protocol for promoting increases in bone mass, bone strength, bone metabolism and structure in rats.[7,13,19,48,51–58] Some other studies have used jump resistance training (squat-like),[6,40] free-fall impact exercise,[59–61] isometric strength training [62] or tower climbing,[12,63] and each of these methods has proven effective. An upward jump protocol is conducted by placing the rat inside a special wooden box surrounded by boards. Each rat has to jump, grasp the top of the board with the forelimbs, and climb up the board. The rat is then returned to the floor of the box to repeat the procedure. These works have demonstrated that the upward jump protocol has beneficial effects on bone mass, strength, and morphometry parameters, irrespective of animal sex or experimental model (young, adult, old, and osteopenia).[7,13,19,48,51–58] Several previous histomorphometric analyses have found that the increase in trabecular bone mass achieved by jumping exercise is primarily due to increased trabecular thickness rather than to noticeable changes in numbers of trabeculae.[6,13] In histomorphometric studies, Swift et al. [64] showed that trabecular thickness in the proximal tibial metaphysis was significantly increased following 5 weeks of jump resistance exercise (15 training sessions; 3 sessions/week interspersed by at least 48 hr of rest) in 24-week-old SD rats. Notomi et al. [6] found that jump resistance training (10 sets, 15 times/day for 8 weeks) in 8-week-old SD rats induced a 13% increase in trabecular thickness within the lumbar vertebrae without marked changes in trabecular number. They also reported that trabecular thickness in the lumbar vertebrae increased significantly by 12% following 4 weeks of jump resistance exercise (10 sets, 15 times/day) in 4-week-old SD rats, but the number of trabeculae was unaffected.[40]
Several micro-CT studies have found that the increase in trabecular bone mass by upward jump exercise is primarily attributable to increased trabecular thickness rather than noticeable changes in trabecular number.[13,48,64] We demonstrated that upward jump exercise (10 jumps/day, 5 days/week with a 40-cm jump height for 5 weeks) during the remobilization period after suspension-induced osteopenia (2 weeks) induced significant increases in trabecular thickness of 63% and trabecular number of 31% when compared with the spontaneous recovery group, resulting in a total increase in cancellous bone mass of the distal femoral metaphysis (Fig. 3).[48] We also reported that upward jump exercise (30 jumps/day, 5 days/week with a 40-cm jump height) applied during hindlimb unloading (3 weeks) can prevent the microarchitectural deterioration of trabecular bone by increasing trabecular thickness while controlling the reduction of trabecular number in the distal femoral metaphysis.[65] Moreover, we showed that upward jump exercises (10 jumps/day, 5 days/week with a 40-cm jump height for 8 weeks) in 10-week-old Wistar rats induced significant increases in trabecular thickness of 51% and the trabecular number of 14% when compared with a sedentary control group.[13] The cancellous bone gain induced by upward jump exercise was suggested to be predominantly attributable to increases in trabecular thickness, with a slight increase in trabecular number. Similar findings have been confirmed in rats subjected to tower climbing.[12,63]

Effects of jumping exercise on trabecular bone microarchitecture after tail suspension in rats. Tail suspension was conducted when rats were 5 weeks old, for 2 weeks. After removal from the tail suspension apparatus, rats jumped upwards 10 times/day, 5 days/week for 5 weeks with a jumping height of 40 cm and were compared with spontaneous recovery rats. The 5 weeks of spontaneous recovery after 2 weeks of skeletal unloading by tail suspension did not sufficiently recover femoral trabecular architecture in young growing rats. On the other hand, subsequent jumping exercise after tail suspension completely restored the deteriorated bone microarchitecture with a subsequent increase in trabecular thickness. [Modified from “Differential effects of jump versus running exercise on trabecular architecture during remobilization after suspension-induced osteopenia in growing rats.”, by Ju YI, et al., 2012, J Appl Physiol (1985), 112, pp. 766–772. Copyright 2012 by the American Physiological Society. Reprinted with permission].
For the first time, we compared the effects of drop jump (10 drop jumps/day, 5 days/week for 8 weeks to heights of 40 and 60 cm) and upward jump (10 upward jumps/day, 5 days/week for 8 weeks to a height of 40 cm) impact trabecular bone mass and microarchitecture of the distal femur in growing rats.[66] We designed a specific device to ensure that rats landed on their hindlimbs during drop jumps to compare the effects of upward and drop jump impacts at the same skeletal site. We showed that trabecular bone mass in growing rats increased more effectively from the takeoff phases than from the landing phases of jumps, suggesting that the concentric muscle contraction of an upward jump would be more effective for stimulating trabecular bone mass than the eccentric muscle contraction of a drop jump. We found that trabecular bone mass and thickness at the distal femur in growing rats significantly increased only with the upward jump exercise, compared with the drop jump exercise (40 and 60 cm) and a sedentary control group. Drop jump exercise did not significantly improve trabecular bone mass except in trabecular number, despite a higher GRF. These results imply that the concentric muscle contraction from an upward jump would be more effective for stimulating elevations in trabecular bone mass than the eccentric muscle contraction of a drop jump. On the basis of these results, one of the characteristics of jumping exercise is that the change in trabecular bone microstructure is primarily due to the thickening of the trabecular bone.
EFFECTS OF SWIMMING EXERCISE ON TRABECULAR BONE MICROARCHITECTURE
Exercise is generally accepted as a key strategy to prevent osteoporosis and bone loss associated with aging. In particular, weight-bearing exercises such as running [67] or jumping [68,69] are effective for enhancing bone mass. However, weight-bearing exercise may lead to an increased risk of stress fractures and osteoarthritis among elderly subjects with decreased physical function and fitness [70] and is thus unsuitable in exercise programs for elderly individuals, particularly for subjects displaying back and/or joint pain. Conversely, swimming, as a non-weight-bearing exercise, might be advantageous in exercise programs for elderly individuals since this activity is not accompanied by gravitational or impact stressors acting on weight-bearing bones. However, unlike running or jumping exercises, swimming exercise is not particularly suitable as an exercise protocol for increasing bone mass because the load on the skeleton is small. Swimmers training in this non-weight-bearing environment has therefore been shown to gain less skeletal benefit than athletes participating in weight-bearing activities.[2,5] In contrast to human swimmers, several studies examining the effects of swimming exercise on bone mass in the long bones of rats have shown that swimming exerts positive influences on bone mass in young,[71] adult,[72] tail-suspended,[73] OVX,[74,75] and high-fat diet-fed rats.[76,77] This discrepancy in the effects of swimming exercise on bone mass between human and animal studies demonstrated in the literature has created a great deal of confusion among researchers in this field. Given the lack of consensus on this topic, the precise effects of swimming on bone remain inconclusive.
In animal studies, swimming protocols are usually conducted by placing the animal inside a water bath maintained at 35 to 36°C. Throughout the swimming exercise, the animal cannot touch the bottom or hang onto the sidewall of the barrel. Kang et al. [76] reported that swimming exercise (60 min/day, 5 times/week for 8 weeks) in SD rat models of high-fat diet-induced osteoporosis could prevent the trabecular architecture in the femur and tibia by increases in trabecular bone mass and trabecular number. Moreover, they found that swimming exercise (60 min/day, 5 times/week for 8 weeks) in SD rats with high-fat diet-induced obesity improved the trabecular bone mass (60–80%, respectively) of the femur and tibia as a result of increased trabecular number (50–58%, respectively) and trabecular thickness (10–16%, respectively).[77] Falcai et al. [78] also compared the effects of swimming (60 min/day, 5 days/week for 3 weeks), jumping (20 jumps/day, 5 days/week for 3 weeks), and vibration therapies (20 min, 5 days/week for 3 weeks; longitudinal amplitude, 1 mm; frequency, 50 Hz/day) on the prevention of micro-architectural deterioration of bone using a rat model with hindlimb unloading. They demonstrated that swimming showed similar levels of osteogenic effect to jumping and a slightly higher effect than a vibration. Moreover, swimming exercise has been reported to produce greater bone adaptations than running in rapidly growing female rats.[79] Furthermore, we examined whether swimming (60 min/day, 5 days/week for 12 weeks) exerts beneficial effects on preventing the loss of trabecular bone mass and the deterioration of trabecular microarchitecture in the femur in a rat model of postmenopausal osteoporosis.[75] In this study, swimming-exercised OVX rats showed a 102% increase in trabecular bone mass, 71% increase in trabecular number, and 18% increase in thickness compared with OVX sedentary control rats. In sham-treated rats, swimming exercise also induced significant increases in trabecular bone mass (64%), trabecular number (42%), and thickness (16%) when compared with sedentary control rats (Fig. 4). Interestingly, the increased rate of gain in metaphyseal trabecular bone mass through swimming exercise in this study resembled that in our previous experiment,[19] which showed that jumping exercise during the remobilization period induced significant increases in trabecular bone mass by 64%, trabecular number by 31%, and trabecular thickness by 63% when compared with spontaneous recovery rats. These results support previous studies showing that the percentage increase in trabecular bone mass for the proximal tibia gained through swimming exercise was similar to values measured in jumping-exercised rats.[78] These results, as a whole, provide additional support for the oft-mentioned notion that swimming exercise may be beneficial for improving or attenuating losses in bone mass and structure in small animals.

Effects of swimming exercise on trabecular bone microarchitecture in ovariectomized rats. Ovariectomies and sham operations were conducted on 18-week-old female rats. After postoperative recovery for 2 weeks after the operation, rats performed swimming in a water bath for 60 min/day, 5 days/week, for 12 weeks. Trabecular bone thickness and number in the distal femoral metaphysis were decreased by ovariectomy. On the other hand, these changes were suppressed by swimming exercise. In sham-treated rats, swimming exercise also induced a significant increase in trabecular bone mass, primarily via significant alterations in trabecular number. [Modified from “Effect of swimming exercise on 3-dimensional trabecular bone microarchitecture in ovariectomized rats.”, by Ju YI, et al., 2015, J Appl Physiol (1985), 119, pp. 990–997. Copyright 2015 by the American Physiological Society. Reprinted with permission].
The osteogenic effect observed in swim-exercised rats is derived primarily from the mechanical loading generated by muscle contraction. This implies that in small laboratory animals such as rats, muscle contraction during swimming may provide levels of mechanical stress comparable to those observed in jumping exercise and even higher levels than running exercise. This contrasts sharply with cross-sectional studies that have demonstrated a lower bone mass in swimmers than athletes engaged in weight-bearing and impact sports. Direct extrapolation of results from rats to humans is thus inappropriate. However, not all swimming studies in animals have been associated with bone gains.[80–85] Bourrin et al. [81] reported that swimming exercise for prolonged periods in growing rats exerted negative effects on both trabecular number and thickness of the distal femoral metaphysis. The exercise protocol used by Bourrin et al. [81] comprised 6 hr/day of swimming, 5 days/week at the end of the experiment, roughly comparable to the regimen of collegiate swimmers at the peak of the training season. The reason for this discrepancy between different studies remains unclear but may be due to differences in duration of swimming exercises performed by rats. Therefore, even in rats, extended time exercising in a hypogravity environment may result in deleterious effects on bone, as in the case of humans. Further studies are needed to clarify the specific effects of swimming exercise on bone structure in humans and animals.
CONCLUSIONS
Based on the literature discussed in this review, we concluded that treadmill running, jumping, and swimming exercises increased trabecular bone mass in small animals and interestingly, exerted different effects on the trabecular bone microarchitecture. That is, low-impact loading such as running and swimming exercises increased trabecular bone mass specifically by increasing the number of trabeculae with slight increases in trabecular thickness. In contrast to treadmill running and swimming exercises, high-impact loading such as jumping exercise increased trabecular bone mass by thickening trabeculae. We provide a brief summary in Table 1 based on our latest research and previous research findings. Collectively, these results suggest that treadmill running, jumping, and swimming exercises have different mechanisms of action on the structural characteristics of trabecular bone in rats. The reason for this phenomenon is unclear, but different patterns of loading stress (strain rate, strain magnitude, cycle number, loading direction, etc.) might result in different patterns of reaction in the trabecular architecture. The effect (if any) of these structural differences on bone strength deserves further study.
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