Nordström P, Lorentzon R
Department of Orthopedics, Umeå University, Sweden.
Osteoporos Int. 1999;10(4):271-7. doi: 10.1007/s001980050226.
The purpose of the present parent-offspring study was to investigate the influence of heredity and environment on bone density in young men. Another aim was to discover whether the same genetic factors influence bone mass, lean mass and muscle strength. Fifty families including a father, mother and one son were investigated. The mothers (aged 44.5 +/- 4.4 years) and fathers (aged 47.1 +/- 4.4 years) generally had a sedentary lifestyle with little physical activity. As a contrast, all but three of the sons (aged 17.0 +/- 0.4 years) were active in ice hockey training. Bone mineral density (BMD, g/cm2) of the total body, head, lumbar spine and femoral neck was measured using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. Muscle strength of the hamstrings and quadriceps muscles was also measured in the boys. BMD values of different sites in the fathers, mothers and sons were adjusted for weight, height, age, and any significant influence of environment. Heritability estimates were obtained as regression coefficients with the boys' adjusted BMD as dependent variable and the adjusted midparent bone density (father BMD + mother BMD/2) as independent variable. Accordingly, heritability explained 34-54% of the variation in the sons' BMD. Midparent BMD of several sites also predicted the boys' lean mass and quadriceps strength, and midparent-offspring differences in lean mass predicted midparent-offspring differences in BMD of the total body, head and spine (beta = 0.30-0.51, p < 0.05). The sons were found to have almost 30% higher femoral neck BMD than their fathers, and physical activity (hours/week) predicted BMD at several sites among the sons beta = 0.26-0.34, p < 0.05). In conclusion, heritability is a main determinant of the variance in BMD in young men. Based on the results we suggest that the same genetic factors may influence bone mass, lean mass and muscle strength by affecting body size. The present study also emphasizes the importance of physical activity for the development and maintenance of BMD in men.
本亲子研究的目的是调查遗传和环境对年轻男性骨密度的影响。另一个目的是发现相同的遗传因素是否会影响骨量、瘦体重和肌肉力量。对包括父亲、母亲和一个儿子的50个家庭进行了调查。母亲(年龄44.5±4.4岁)和父亲(年龄47.1±4.4岁)通常久坐不动,几乎没有体育活动。相比之下,除了三个儿子(年龄17.0±0.4岁)外,其他儿子都积极参加冰球训练。使用双能X线吸收法测量全身、头部、腰椎和股骨颈的骨矿物质密度(BMD,g/cm²)。还测量了男孩的腘绳肌和股四头肌的肌肉力量。对父亲、母亲和儿子不同部位的BMD值进行了体重、身高、年龄以及环境的任何显著影响的校正。以男孩校正后的BMD作为因变量,校正后的中亲骨密度(父亲BMD+母亲BMD/2)作为自变量,获得遗传率估计值作为回归系数。因此,遗传率解释了儿子BMD变异的34-54%。几个部位的中亲BMD也预测了男孩的瘦体重和股四头肌力量,瘦体重的中亲-子代差异预测了全身、头部和脊柱BMD的中亲-子代差异(β=0.30-0.51,p<0.05)。发现儿子的股骨颈BMD比他们的父亲高近30%,体育活动(每周小时数)预测了儿子几个部位的BMD(β=0.26-0.34,p<0.05)。总之,遗传率是年轻男性BMD变异的主要决定因素。基于这些结果,我们认为相同的遗传因素可能通过影响体型来影响骨量、瘦体重和肌肉力量。本研究还强调了体育活动对男性BMD的发育和维持的重要性。