Azosemide-Induced Fetal Wavy Ribs and Their Disappearance after Birth in Rats

1985 
Azosemide produced bent long bones such as wavy ribs in rat fetuses, but these abnormalities could not be found in the adult offspring. In the present study, the morphological sequence from appearance to disappearance of wavy ribs was examined in cartilage-bone double stained specimens of fetuses and pups from mothers treated with azosemide on day 16 of gestation. The first detected change of the skeletal abnormalities was inhibition of bone deposition in the ossification centers of fetuses on day 17 of gestation. A bend first appeared on day 18 of gestation, and consisted of cartilage and portion stained neither alcian blue nor alizarin red S. Ossification began at this stage. From day 19 of gestation onward, ossification progressed toward the ends of the cartilage model including the bent region. The bend disappeared in most pups as bone in the bent region grew on days 10–14 postpartum. The present findings imply that the bend may be caused by difference in growth between cartilaginous and unstained portions, and a surface remodeling of bones may straighten the bend in the subsequent bone growth.
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