C. J. Jagger
St George's Hospital
9 Papers
97 Citations
C. J. Jagger is an academic researcher from St George's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stimulation & Bone resorption. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 9 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Role for parathyroid hormone in mechanical responsiveness of rat bone
TL;DR: A major role for PTH is revealed in the mechanical responsiveness of rat bone by sensitizing either the strain-sensing mechanism itself or early responses of bone to strain-generated signals.
117
Tumor Necrosis Factor-α Mediates Osteopenia Caused by Depletion of Antioxidants
TL;DR: It is found that the loss of bone caused by either BSO administration or ovariectomy was inhibited by administration of soluble TNFα receptors and abrogated in mice deleted for TNF α gene expression.
Estrogen suppresses activation but enhances formation phase of osteogenic response to mechanical stimulation in rat bone.
TL;DR: It was found that when estrogen administration was started 3 d after mechanical stimulation, by which time osteogenesis is established, estrogen augmented the osteogenic response, consistent with in vitro evidence for estrogen responsiveness in two phenotypically distinct bone cell types: stromal cells, whose functional activities are suppressed, and osteoblasts, which are stimulated, by estrogen.
The role of prostaglandins and nitric oxide in the response of bone to mechanical forces
TL;DR: Mechanically induced osteogenesis involves early expression of c-fos and IGF-1 by osteocytes, which are believed to be the strain-sensitive cells in bone, and both NOS and PG synthase are crucial to the initial transduction of the mechanical stimulus into an osteogenic response.
66
Patent
Use of antioxidants to treat bone loss disorders
Timothy J. Chambers,K. Fuller,C. J. Jagger,J. M. Lean +3 more
- 19 Apr 2004
TL;DR: Bone loss disorders can be treated or prevented by administration of an agent which increases the levels of oxidant defences and/or at least one antioxidant in a subject as mentioned in this paper, and the agent can be an antioxidant and may act either directly to increase antioxidant levels or indirectly.
19