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H M Frost

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Articles 296
Citations 3987
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Recent Articles
31.
Yao W, Jee W, Chen J, Liu H, Tam C, Cui L, et al.
J Bone Miner Res . 2000 Jun; 15(6):1158-68. PMID: 10841185
The objectives of this study were to investigate the different effects on muscle mass and cancellous (proximal tibial metaphysis [PTM]) and cortical (tibial shaft [TX]) bone mass of sham-operated and...
32.
Frost H
Med Sci Sports Exerc . 2000 May; 32(5):911-7. PMID: 10795780
The still-evolving Utah paradigm of skeletal physiology supplements former ideas about the control of postnatal bone strength and "mass" in health and disease, on earth and in orbit, and as...
33.
Frost H
Osteoporos Int . 1999 Dec; 10(5):345-52. PMID: 10591831
Recent realizations have begun to change how 'osteoporoses' are diagnosed, managed and studied. This article explains the nature and basis of some resulting controversies, chiefly for clinicians who manage such...
34.
Frost H
J Bone Miner Res . 1999 Nov; 14(11):1816-21. PMID: 10571680
The decrease in trabecular number with aging and in osteoporosis seems to be naturally irreversible. In one view the resulting loss of bone strength would be irreversible too, but in...
35.
Frost H
J Bone Miner Res . 1999 Sep; 14(9):1473-7. PMID: 10469274
In this model of estrogen effects on bone, a postulated mediator mechanism in marrow would affect modeling and remodeling only of bone next to or close to it. That mediator...
36.
Frost H
Anat Rec . 1999 Jun; 255(2):162-74. PMID: 10359517
This model of joint design argues 1) that excessive fatigue damage (MDx) in articular cartilage collagen can be the "final cause" of an arthrosis; 2) that known responses of a...
37.
Frost H
J Bone Miner Metab . 1999 May; 17(2):90-7. PMID: 10340635
Trauma excepted, muscle forces cause the largest loads on bones and the largest bone strains. In children, steadily increasing muscle strength increases bone loads and strains above a modeling threshold,...
38.
Frost H
Bone . 1998 Nov; 23(5):395-8. PMID: 9823444
This article suggests that growth hormone effects on bone biomechanical factors help to cause changes in osteoblastic and osteoclastic activities in gigantism and growth-hormone-deficiency states. The suggestion stands partly on...
39.
Frost H
J Orthop Sci . 1998 Sep; 3(5):282-6. PMID: 9732563
No abstract available.
40.
Frost H
J Orthop Sci . 1998 Sep; 3(5):272-81. PMID: 9732562
Bone modeling can slowly strengthen bones to keep their strains below bone's microdamage (MDx) threshold. When that condition is satisfied the slow basic multicellular unit (BMU)-based remodeling can usually repair...