Deer Antlers Inspire a New Theory on Osteoporosis
Spanish Foundation for Science and Technology
January 3, 2012
Picture Credit: Spanish Foundation for
Science and Technology
The loss of manganese
could mean that calcium does not stick to bones and could cause
osteoporosis. This is the new theory put forward by researchers at the
University of Castilla-La Mancha (UCLM) in Spain after studying deer
antlers. The hypothesis published this month in the Frontiers of
Bioscience journal still needs to be confirmed by the scientific
community.
Through the study of deer antlers, researchers of the Research
Institute of Hunting Resources (IREC, joint centre UCLM-CSIC-JCCM)
suggest that the origin of osteoporosis could not be directly linked to
the lack of calcium but rather to the lack of a mineral essential to
calcium absorption. In particular they believe that this could be
manganese, according to a new theory published in the latest issue of
the Frontiers of Bioscience journal.
According to Tomás Landete, sub-director of the IREC and one of
team's researchers, "previous antler studies show that manganese is
necessary for calcium absorption. Our hypothesis is that when the human
body absorbs less manganese or when it is sent from the skeleton to
other organs that require it, such as the brain, the calcium that is
extracted at the same time is then not properly absorbed and is
excreted in the urine. It is in this way that osteoporosis can slowly
strike."
The theory must now be validated with more studies and medical trials
but its creators believe that it is a "step in a totally new direction
in osteoporosis research as it considers calcium loss to be a
consequence of the disease and not the origin."
The idea for the new proposal came from a dramatic increase in antler
breakages seen in Spain in 2005. When scientists analysed these antlers
in detail, they realised that weakening was due to manganese depletion
caused by the deer's diet. That year saw an intensely cold winter which
in turn caused plants to reduce their manganese concentrations in
response to such stress.
"Antlers grow by transferring 20% of the skeleton's calcium towards
their structure. We therefore saw that it was not calcium deficiency
that caused the weakening but rather the deficiency of manganese,"
clarifies Landete. "The lack of manganese was almost as if the 'glue'
that sticks calcium to antlers bones was missing."
Links to Alzheimer's and
Parkinson's Disease
In the case of humans, the researchers suggest that manganese is
extracted from the bones when it is required by the "most important"
organs, such as the brain. The researcher adds that "maintaining the
bones is important, but even more so is sustaining the working of the
brain, which uses 25% of our energy intake when at rest."
The team also points out that when this vital mineral runs out after
the onset of osteoporosis, conditions like Alzheimer's disease,
Parkinson's disease, and senile dementia could strike. To put this
theory to the test, they analysed data from 113 patients who were
operated on for osteoporosis and osteoarthritis (wear and tear of joint
cartilage) at Hellín Hospital in Albacete, Spain between 2008
and 2009. Some 40% of those operated on for osteoporosis showed some
form of cerebral dysfunction whereas this was not the case in any of
the 68 patients operated on for osteoarthritis.
Furthermore, the percentage increased with age and only amongst those
patients with osteoporosis. The exhaustion of manganese reserves could
be behind the bone disease and the cerebral degeneration. "We are
collecting human bones to confirm this. However, studies on rats in
which Alzheimer's disease has been induced by aluminium intoxication
show that as the severity of this disease increases, manganese levels
in the bones decrease," says Landete.
The researcher also recalls studies that link manganese to Parkinson's
disease and show that astrocytes, which provide support to neurons,
have specific enzymes that require manganese. In any case, researchers
outline that their theory "is not a final solution to such diseases but
constitutes the first step in a new direction" – a new direction that
requires validation and confirmation from the scientific community.
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