Bone Formation
Recent Insights
Catechins in green tea potentially counteract osteoporosis by negatively affecting bone loss processes and enhancing bone formation processes.
Bone Formation Green Tea Catechin Osteoporosis
Cherries and their products have antioxidant properties, the capacity to inhibit the acute inflammatory response to urate crystals, and the ability to decrease bone resorption that is characteristic of gouty bone erosions.
Antioxidant Bone Formation Cherry
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Research Articles
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Benefits and mechanisms of polysaccharides from Chinese medicinal herbs for anti-osteoporosis therapy: A review
2021 Dec International Journal of Biological Macromolecules Lei S, Su J, Zhang Y, Huang X, Wang X, Huang M, et al.
This review will provide a better understanding of the anti-osteoporotic effects of polysaccharides and the concomitant modulations of signalling pathways.
Review ArticleAnalysis of Molecular Mechanism of Erxian Decoction in Treating Osteoporosis Based on Formula Optimization Model
2021 Jun 18 Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity Yang L, Fan L, Wang K, Chen Y, Liang L, Qin X, et al.
Many Erxian Decoction (EXD) ingredients exert significant therapeutic effects toward osteoporosis (OP), to effectively promote bone formation, inhibit bone absorption, and increase bone density.
Network Pharmacology OsteoporosisOsteoprotective Roles of Green Tea Catechins
2020 Nov 16 Antioxidants Huang HT, Cheng TL, Lin SY, Ho CJ, Chyu JY, Yang RS, et al.
Review Article Osteoporosis Green Tea Catechin Bone FormationCatechins in green tea potentially counteract osteoporosis by negatively affecting bone loss processes and enhancing bone formation processes.
Preventive Effects of Chrysanthemum coronarium L. Extract on Bone Metabolism In Vitro and In Vivo
2020 Nov 18 Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine Kim SA, Lee AS, Hur HJ, Lee SH, Sung MJ
Experimental Study Animal Study Chrysanthemum OsteoporosisChrysanthemum coronarium L. extract can both stimulate bone building cells and inhibit bone breaking cells, so has potential as a natural treatment for osteoporosis.
Yougui pills exert osteoprotective effects on rabbit steroid-related osteonecrosis of the femoral head by activating β-catenin
2019 Dec Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy Zhang P, Xu H, Wang P, Dong R, Xia C, Shi Z, et al.
Yougui pills (YGPs) could suppress osteoclastogenesis and promote bone formation during steroid-related osteonecrosis of the femoral head (SONFH) in rabbits by activating β-catenin.
Animal StudyResearch Insights
Insights are moderated by the Research Hub team and offer an at-a-glance overview of interesting research findings.
Chrysanthemum coronarium L. extract can both stimulate bone building cells and inhibit bone breaking cells, so has potential as a natural treatment for osteoporosis.
2020 Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine Preventive Effects of Chrysanthemum coronarium L. Extract on Bone Metabolism In Vitro and In Vivo Kim SA, Lee AS, Hur HJ, Lee SH, Sung MJ
Experimental Study Chrysanthemum Osteoporosis
The study examined the effects of Chrysanthemum coronarium L. extracts on in vitro cell cultures and animal models with bone loss. This was done by observing the increase and decrease of bone formation markers in different cell lines, specifically the murine preosteoblastic cell line MC3T3-E1, and the murine macrophage-like cell line RAW264.7 respectively.
The results showed that the extract stimulated the differentiation of osteoblasts, cells responsible for bone formation, and inhibited osteoclast differentiation, cells that break down bone. In osteoporotic animal models, the extract prevented bone loss, preserved the structure of the small bones and improved serum bone turnover markers. This implies that the extract has promising potential as a natural therapy for osteoporotic bone loss.
Catechins in green tea potentially counteract osteoporosis by negatively affecting bone loss processes and enhancing bone formation processes.
2020 Antioxidants Osteoprotective Roles of Green Tea Catechins Huang HT, Cheng TL, Lin SY, Ho CJ, Chyu JY, Yang RS, et al.
Review Article Green Tea Catechin Osteoporosis
The research paper explores the role of catechins, a key compound found in green tea, in combating osteoporosis. In an endeavour to understand the cellular processes, the research focuses on the two critical processes involved in the onset of osteoporosis: osteoblastogenesis, the process of bone formation, and osteoclastogenesis, the process of bone resorption. Specifically, the research emphasizes that inflammation and high reactive oxygen levels enhance osteoclastogenesis while concurrently reducing osteoblastogenesis. Green tea catechins, which have strong antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, are assumed to rebalance these two processes.
The discussions revolve around the potential of green tea catechins to curb osteoclastogenesis by increasing the rate of osteoclast apoptosis, hampering osteoclastogenesis, and impeding bone resorption in a controlled environment. This is achieved directly through interactions with pre-osteoclasts/osteoclasts or indirectly through regulation of pre-osteoclasts via mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) or stromal cells. Furthermore, catechins are credited with boosting osteoblastogenesis by enhancing the osteogenic differentiation of MSCs and improving osteoblastic survival, proliferation, differentiation, and mineralization. The paper verifies the positive in-vitro effects of catechins on osteogenesis through various animal models and human observational studies.
Cherries and their products have antioxidant properties, the capacity to inhibit the acute inflammatory response to urate crystals, and the ability to decrease bone resorption that is characteristic of gouty bone erosions.
2019 Therapeutic Advances in Musculoskeletal Disease Is there a role for cherries in the management of gout? Collins MW, Saag KG, Singh JA
Review Article Antioxidant Cherry Gout
Phenolics, and more specifically, the anthocyanins found abundantly in cherries, have been linked to the inhibition of IL-6, TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-8, COX-I and COX-II, as well as the downregulation of NFkB-mediated osteoclastogenesis, suggesting that cherries may have the ability to reduce both acute and chronic inflammation that play a role in recurrent gout flares and chronic destructive arthropathy. Additionally, cyanidin-3-glucoside enhanced genes related to osteoblast differentiation, suggesting that anthocyanins may also play a role in bone formation.
Dried plums, or prunes, have potential to exert beneficial effects on bone health and may help in combating osteoporosis in postmenopausal women, if consumed as part of their recommended fruit intake.
2017 Nutrients Dried Plums, Prunes and Bone Health: A Comprehensive Review Wallace T
Review Article Bone Health Osteoporosis Plum
The research process involved a comprehensive review of scientific literature available in the PubMed database up until January 24, 2017. This literature included cell studies, animal studies, population and clinical studies that examined effects of dried plums or their extracts on markers of bone health. In total, 24 research papers were reviewed and their findings are summarized.
Discussing the results, animal, cell, and clinical studies suggest that dried plums or their extracts positively impact bone formation and limit bone breakdown. This is likely due to the influence of dried plums on cell signaling pathways that dictate osteoblast (bone-building cells) and osteoclast (bone-destroying cells) differentiation. Clinical studies also indicate that consumption of dried plums could have beneficial effects on bone mineral density, particularly in postmenopausal women. There were no adverse effects reported in these studies, further suggesting that they could safely be included in regular dietary routines.
Review Articles
Review articles summarise and critically evaluate the current state of research on a specific topic or field by synthesising multiple primary research studies.
Benefits and mechanisms of polysaccharides from Chinese medicinal herbs for anti-osteoporosis therapy: A review
2021 Dec International Journal of Biological Macromolecules Lei S, Su J, Zhang Y, Huang X, Wang X, Huang M, et al.
This review will provide a better understanding of the anti-osteoporotic effects of polysaccharides and the concomitant modulations of signalling pathways.
Review ArticleOsteoprotective Roles of Green Tea Catechins
2020 Nov 16 Antioxidants Huang HT, Cheng TL, Lin SY, Ho CJ, Chyu JY, Yang RS, et al.
Review Article Osteoporosis Green Tea Catechin Bone FormationCatechins in green tea potentially counteract osteoporosis by negatively affecting bone loss processes and enhancing bone formation processes.
Is there a role for cherries in the management of gout?
2019 Jan Therapeutic Advances in Musculoskeletal Disease Collins MW, Saag KG, Singh JA
Review Article Gout Uric Acid Bone Formation Cherry AntioxidantCherries and their products have antioxidant properties, the capacity to inhibit the acute inflammatory response to urate crystals, and the ability to decrease bone resorption that is characteristic of gouty bone erosions.
Dried Plums, Prunes and Bone Health: A Comprehensive Review
2017 Apr 19 Nutrients Wallace T
Review Article Osteoporosis Bone Health PlumDried plums, or prunes, have potential to exert beneficial effects on bone health and may help in combating osteoporosis in postmenopausal women, if consumed as part of their recommended fruit intake.
Clinical Trials
Clinical trials are research studies that involve people and are conducted to evaluate the safety and efficacy of new treatments or interventions, such as drugs, medical devices, or behavioural therapies.
Effect of Whole Blueberry on Bone Biomarkers in Postmenopausal Women with Mild-to-Moderate Bone Loss (P01-029-19)
2019 Jun Current Developments in Nutrition Du C, Norris K, Hanlon Y, Panth P, Imrhan V, Vijayagopal P, et al.
Blueberry consumption showed modest protective effects on bone metabolism, including increased bone formation and decreased fracture risk and inflammation, although no changes in bone density were observed.
Randomised Controlled Trial Clinical Study Postmenopausal BlueberryEffect of Zuogui pill and Yougui pill on osteoporosis: a randomized controlled trial
2018 Feb Journal of Traditional and Complementary Medicine Wenxiong L, Kuaiqiang Z, Zhu L, Li L, Yan C, Jichao Y, et al.
Zuogui pill or Yougui pill could improve bone mineral density (BMD), ease pain, relieve Kidney deficiency syndrome, improve the quality of life osteoporosis patients, inhibit bone conversion and regulate the coupling balance of bone formation and bone resorption.
Randomised Controlled Trial You Gui WanStudy Protocols
Published study protocols are detailed plans that outline the objectives, methodology, statistical analyses, and organisation of a research study that have been made publicly available for others to review and use as a reference.
Presentation Slides
Experimental Study
Chrysanthemum coronarium L. extract can both stimulate bone building cells and inhibit bone breaking cells, so has potential as a natural treatment for osteoporosis.
Kim SA, Lee AS, Hur HJ, Lee SH, Sung MJ
Review Article
Catechins in green tea potentially counteract osteoporosis by negatively affecting bone loss processes and enhancing bone formation processes.
Huang HT, Cheng TL, Lin SY, Ho CJ, Chyu JY, Yang RS, Chen CH, Shen CL
Review Article
Cherries and their products have antioxidant properties, the capacity to inhibit the acute inflammatory response to urate crystals, and the ability to decrease bone resorption that is characteristic of gouty bone erosions.
Collins MW, Saag KG, Singh JA
Review Article
Dried plums, or prunes, have potential to exert beneficial effects on bone health and may help in combating osteoporosis in postmenopausal women, if consumed as part of their recommended fruit intake.
Wallace T
Executive Summary
Write an executive summary in the form of a blog article on the topic of "Research into Chinese medicine treatment for Bone Formation" summarising the research below and using language that can be easily understood by patients and avoiding medical jargon using a professional and caring tone of voice.
Write an executive summary in the form of a blog article on the topic of "Researched Chinese medicine treatments for Bone Formation" summarising the research below in an objective and easy to understand way, and using language that can be easily understood by patients. Group the article into Chinese medicine treatments first, followed by nutrition and other treatments. Avoid using medical jargon and use a professional and caring tone of voice.
Write me a concise but easy to understand executive summary on the topic of "Chinese medicine treatments for Bone Formation" based on the following research that I will give you. Your summary should be 2 paragraphs long in Australian English spelling and include references to the studies.
A Experimental Study published in 2020 in the journal Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine found that Chrysanthemum coronarium L. extract can both stimulate bone building cells and inhibit bone breaking cells, so has potential as a natural treatment for osteoporosis. The study examined the effects of Chrysanthemum coronarium L. extracts on in vitro cell cultures and animal models with bone loss. This was done by observing the increase and decrease of bone formation markers in different cell lines, specifically the murine preosteoblastic cell line MC3T3-E1, and the murine macrophage-like cell line RAW264.7 respectively. The results showed that the extract stimulated the differentiation of osteoblasts, cells responsible for bone formation, and inhibited osteoclast differentiation, cells that break down bone. In osteoporotic animal models, the extract prevented bone loss, preserved the structure of the small bones and improved serum bone turnover markers. This implies that the extract has promising potential as a natural therapy for osteoporotic bone loss.
A Review Article published in 2020 in the journal Antioxidants found that Catechins in green tea potentially counteract osteoporosis by negatively affecting bone loss processes and enhancing bone formation processes. The research paper explores the role of catechins, a key compound found in green tea, in combating osteoporosis. In an endeavour to understand the cellular processes, the research focuses on the two critical processes involved in the onset of osteoporosis: osteoblastogenesis, the process of bone formation, and osteoclastogenesis, the process of bone resorption. Specifically, the research emphasizes that inflammation and high reactive oxygen levels enhance osteoclastogenesis while concurrently reducing osteoblastogenesis. Green tea catechins, which have strong antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, are assumed to rebalance these two processes. The discussions revolve around the potential of green tea catechins to curb osteoclastogenesis by increasing the rate of osteoclast apoptosis, hampering osteoclastogenesis, and impeding bone resorption in a controlled environment. This is achieved directly through interactions with pre-osteoclasts/osteoclasts or indirectly through regulation of pre-osteoclasts via mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) or stromal cells. Furthermore, catechins are credited with boosting osteoblastogenesis by enhancing the osteogenic differentiation of MSCs and improving osteoblastic survival, proliferation, differentiation, and mineralization. The paper verifies the positive in-vitro effects of catechins on osteogenesis through various animal models and human observational studies.
A Review Article published in 2019 in the journal Therapeutic Advances in Musculoskeletal Disease found that Cherries and their products have antioxidant properties, the capacity to inhibit the acute inflammatory response to urate crystals, and the ability to decrease bone resorption that is characteristic of gouty bone erosions. Phenolics, and more specifically, the anthocyanins found abundantly in cherries, have been linked to the inhibition of IL-6, TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-8, COX-I and COX-II, as well as the downregulation of NFkB-mediated osteoclastogenesis, suggesting that cherries may have the ability to reduce both acute and chronic inflammation that play a role in recurrent gout flares and chronic destructive arthropathy. Additionally, cyanidin-3-glucoside enhanced genes related to osteoblast differentiation, suggesting that anthocyanins may also play a role in bone formation.
A Review Article published in 2017 in the journal Nutrients found that Dried plums, or prunes, have potential to exert beneficial effects on bone health and may help in combating osteoporosis in postmenopausal women, if consumed as part of their recommended fruit intake. The research process involved a comprehensive review of scientific literature available in the PubMed database up until January 24, 2017. This literature included cell studies, animal studies, population and clinical studies that examined effects of dried plums or their extracts on markers of bone health. In total, 24 research papers were reviewed and their findings are summarized. Discussing the results, animal, cell, and clinical studies suggest that dried plums or their extracts positively impact bone formation and limit bone breakdown. This is likely due to the influence of dried plums on cell signaling pathways that dictate osteoblast (bone-building cells) and osteoclast (bone-destroying cells) differentiation. Clinical studies also indicate that consumption of dried plums could have beneficial effects on bone mineral density, particularly in postmenopausal women. There were no adverse effects reported in these studies, further suggesting that they could safely be included in regular dietary routines.
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