Showing posts with label Risedronic acid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Risedronic acid. Show all posts

Friday, August 23, 2013

New treatment for brittle bone disease found

We know that, Risedronic acid (see structure) (INN) or risedronate sodium (USAN) is a bisphosphonate used to strengthen bone, treat or prevent osteoporosis, and treat Paget's disease of bone. It is produced and marketed by Warner ChilcottSanofi-Aventis, and in Japan by Takeda under the trade names ActonelAtelvia, and Benet. It is also available in a preparation that includes a calcium carbonate supplement, asActonel with Calcium.

Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI and sometimes known as brittle bone disease, or "Lobstein syndrome") is a congenital bone disorder. People with OI are born with defective connective tissue, or without the ability to make it, usually because of a deficiency ofType-I collagen. This deficiency arises from an amino acid substitution of glycine to bulkier amino acids in the collagen triple helixstructure. The larger amino acid side-chains create steric hindrance that creates a bulge in the collagen complex, which in turn influences both the molecular nanomechanics as well as the interaction between molecules, which are both compromised.[3] As a result, the body may respond by hydrolyzing the improper collagen structure. If the body does not destroy the improper collagen, the relationship between the collagen fibrils and hydroxyapatite crystals to form bone is altered, causing brittleness.[4] Another suggested disease mechanism is that the stress state within collagen fibrils is altered at the locations of mutations, where locally larger shear forces lead to rapid failure of fibrils even at moderate loads as the homogeneous stress state found in healthy collagen fibrils is lost.[3]These recent works suggest that OI must be understood as a multi-scale phenomenon, which involves mechanisms at the genetic, nano-, micro- and macro-level of tissues.