Vet Comp Orthop Traumatol 2001; 14(04): 179-184
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1632695
Review Article
Schattauer GmbH

The Utah paradigm of skeletal physiology: what is it?

H. M. Frost
1   Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Southern Colorado Clinic, American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, Association of Bone and Joint Surgeons, American Association of Anatomists, American Society for Bone and Mineral Research, International Society for Musculoskeletal and Neuronal Interactions, Pueblo, Colorado, USA
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Publication History

Received 20 February 2001

Accepted 02 April 2001

Publication Date:
09 February 2018 (online)

Summary

An elegant design stratagem for an organ intended to carry loads for life without fracturing, rupturing or wearing out would make those loads determine the organ's strength. It seems load-bearing mammalian bones, joints, fascia, ligaments and tendons do exactly that. Physiologists begin to understand how they do it, and that led to the Utah paradigm of skeletal physiology. Those adaptations occur in two major steps. The first step creates the genetically predetermined newborn skeleton with its anatomical relationships and biologic machinery. The second step adds to the first one all postnatal adaptations to mechanical and other challenges that would affect an organ's strength, size, architecture and composition. During postnatal growth, increasing loads make tissue-level biologic mechanisms correspondingly increase the strength of such organs. Mechanical strain-dependent signals help to control that process, which muscle strength, muscle anatomy and neuromuscular physiology strongly influence. Its problems seem to cause or help to cause numerous skeletal and some extraskeletal disorders. A Table in the article lists examples of them.

This article summarizes salient features of the Utah paradigm, which includes both facts and some meanings inferred from them. Other times and people must resolve any questions about those meanings and about the devils that can lie in the details. Parenthetically, instead of the accuracy of the facts on which that paradigm stands, the above questions usually concern the different meanings people can infer from facts, and whether particular facts and ideas would be relevant to a particular issue.

 
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