Abstract

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients have a high incidence of fracture due in part to cortical porosity. The goal of this study was to study cortical pore infilling utilizing two rodent models of progressive CKD. Exp 1: Female C57Bl/6J mice (16-week-old) were given dietary adenine (0.2%) to induce CKD for 10weeks after which calcium water supplementation (Ca-H2O; 1.5% and 3%) was given to suppress PTH for another 4weeks. Exp 2: Male Cy/+ rats were aged to ~30weeks with baseline porosity assessed using in vivo μCT. A second in vivo scan followed 5-weeks of Ca-H2O (3%) supplementation. Exp 1: Untreated adenine mice had elevated blood urea nitrogen (BUN), parathyroid hormone (PTH), and cortical porosity (~2.6% porosity) while Ca-H2O lowered PTH and cortical porosity (0.5-0.8% porosity). Exp 2: Male Cy/+ rats at baseline had variable porosity (0.5%-10%), but after PTH suppression via Ca-H2O, cortical porosity in all rats was lower than 0.5%. Individual pore dynamics measured via a custom MATLAB code demonstrated that 85% of pores infilled while 12% contracted in size. Ca-H2O supplementation causes net cortical pore infilling over time and imparted mechanical benefits. While calcium supplementation is not a viable clinical treatment for CKD, these data demonstrate pore infilling is possible and further research is required to examine clinically relevant therapeutics that may cause net pore infilling in CKD.

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