Publications by authors named "Julia Deutschmann"

Microbiota can both negatively and positively impact radiation-induced bone loss. Our prior research showed that compared to mice with conventional gut microbiota (CM), mice with restricted gut microbiota (RM) reduced inflammatory tumor necrosis factor (TNF) in bone marrow, interleukin (IL)-17 in blood, and chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 20 (CCL20) in bone marrow under anti-IL-17 treatment. We showed that Muribaculum intestinale was more abundant in intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) from the small intestine of female RM mice and positively associated with augmented skeletal bone structure.

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Intestinal microbiota are considered a sensor for molecular pathways, which orchestrate energy balance, immune responses, and cell regeneration. We previously reported that microbiota restriction promoted higher levels of systemic radiation-induced genotoxicity, proliferative lymphocyte activation, and apoptotic polarization of metabolic pathways. Restricted intestinal microbiota (RM) that harbors increased abundance of Lactobacillus johnsonii (LBJ) has been investigated for bacterial communities that correlated radiation-induced genotoxicity.

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Osteoporosis is extremely frequent in post-menopausal women; nevertheless, osteoporosis in men is also a severe and frequently occurring but often underestimated disease. Increasing evidence links bone loss in male idiopathic osteoporosis and age related osteoporosis to osteoblast dysfunction rather than increased osteoclast activity as seen in postmenopausal osteoporosis. The aim of this study was to investigate gene expression of osteoblast related genes and of bone architecture in bone samples derived from elderly osteoporotic men with hip fractures (OP) in comparison to bone samples from age matched men with osteoarthritis of the hip (OA).

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The quantitative assessment of metabolic bone diseases relies on tissue properties such as bone mineral density (BMD) and bone microarchitecture. In spite of an increasing number of publications using high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed-tomography (HR-pQCT), the accurate and reproducible separation of cortical and trabecular bone remains challenging. In this paper, we present a novel, fully automated, threshold-independent technique for the segmentation of cortical and trabecular bone in HR-pQCT scans.

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Although postmenopausal and elderly women are more frequently affected by osteoporosis, men are not protected from the disease. Age-related osteoporosis involves several gender-specific clinical aspects such as disease onset time and different dynamics of bone loss. Men benefit from larger bones and a time-delay of age-related changes in bone density and quality.

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