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Osteoporosis in Light of a New Mechanism Theory of Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness and Non-Contact Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury.

Balázs SonkodiRita BardoniGyula Poór
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2022)
Osteoporosis is a disorder, with a largely unknown pathomechanism, that is often marked as a "silent thief", because it usually only becomes undisguised when fractures occur. This implies that the pathological damage occurs earlier than the sensation of pain. The current authors put forward a non-contact injury model in which the chronic overloading of an earlier autologously microinjured Piezo2 ion channel of the spinal proprioceptor terminals could lead the way to re-injury and earlier aging in a dose-limiting and threshold-driven way. As a result, the aging process could eventually lead the way to the metabolic imbalance of primary osteoporosis in a quad-phasic non-contact injury pathway. Furthermore, it is emphasised that delayed onset muscle soreness, non-contact anterior cruciate injury and osteoporosis could have the same initiating proprioceptive non-contact Piezo2 channelopathy, at different locations, however, with different environmental risk factors and a different genetic predisposition, therefore producing different outcomes longitudinally. The current injury model does not intend to challenge any running pathogenic theories or findings, but rather to highlight a principal injury mechanism.
Keyphrases
  • postmenopausal women
  • risk factors
  • bone mineral density
  • skeletal muscle
  • gene expression
  • type diabetes
  • adipose tissue
  • metabolic syndrome
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide
  • climate change
  • high intensity