Gibson Jane H, Mitchell Angela, Harries Mark G, Reeve Jonathan
Olympic Medical Institute, Northwick Park Hospital, HAI 3UJ, Harrow, Middlesex, UK.
Osteoporos Int. 2004 Aug;15(8):611-8. doi: 10.1007/s00198-004-1589-2. Epub 2004 Mar 26.
Although the female athletic triad is widely recognized clinically, there have been few studies quantitating the effect of disordered eating on bone mineral density. The purpose of this study was to explore the mechanisms through which disordered eating might influence the skeleton in nationally or internationally competitive runners. Fifty British national or higher standard middle and long-distance female runners aged under 36 years were recruited; 24 had amenorrhea (AM), nine had oligomenorrhea (OL) and the others were eumenorrheic (EU). Bone mineral density (BMD g.cm(-2)) of the proximal femur (femoral neck and trochanter) and lumbar spine (L2-L4) was measured by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) and compared with population-based European reference data. Dietary eating patterns were assessed with the Eating Attitudes Test (EAT26) and Bulimia Investigatory Test Edinburgh (BITE) questionnaires. High eating disorder scores were common; the EAT26 score predicted menstrual disorders (P=0.014) and correlated with body mass index (BMI). BMD was generally low in the AM group, but was raised in the proximal femur in the EU group. In the AM group, younger age at start of training was associated with higher trochanteric BMD. In addition, years of eumenorrhea were positively associated with spine BMD. Although a high EAT26 score was associated with lower BMD in the proximal femur, this could be explained by the intermediary effect of menstrual disorders. Osteocalcin, a marker of bone formation, was reduced in the AM group and was also reduced by high VO2max and high BITE score, consistent with a central (hypothalamic) pathway for suppressing osteoblastic bone formation. Eumenorrheic runners had increased femoral BMD compared with European controls, consistent with a positive effect of increased mechanical loading. The effect of disordered eating to reduce BMD could be explained by its association with menstrual dysfunction. Lumbar spine BMD was reduced most in those athletes who menstruated for the shortest time in adolescence.
尽管女性运动三联征在临床上已被广泛认识,但很少有研究对饮食失调对骨密度的影响进行量化。本研究的目的是探讨饮食失调可能影响国家或国际竞技跑步运动员骨骼的机制。招募了50名年龄在36岁以下的英国国家或更高水平的中长跑女性运动员;其中24人闭经(AM),9人月经过少(OL),其余为月经正常(EU)。采用双能X线吸收法(DXA)测量股骨近端(股骨颈和大转子)和腰椎(L2-L4)的骨密度(BMD,g.cm⁻²),并与基于欧洲人群的参考数据进行比较。通过饮食态度测试(EAT26)和爱丁堡贪食症调查测试(BITE)问卷评估饮食模式。高饮食失调得分很常见;EAT26得分可预测月经紊乱(P=0.014),并与体重指数(BMI)相关。AM组的骨密度普遍较低,但EU组股骨近端的骨密度有所升高。在AM组中,开始训练时年龄较小与较高的大转子骨密度相关。此外,月经正常的年限与脊柱骨密度呈正相关。尽管EAT26得分高与股骨近端骨密度较低相关,但这可以通过月经紊乱的中介作用来解释。骨钙素是骨形成的标志物,在AM组中降低,并且在高最大摄氧量和高BITE得分时也降低,这与抑制成骨细胞骨形成的中枢(下丘脑)途径一致。与欧洲对照组相比,月经正常的跑步运动员股骨骨密度增加,这与机械负荷增加的积极作用一致。饮食失调导致骨密度降低的作用可以通过其与月经功能障碍的关联来解释。腰椎骨密度在青春期月经时间最短的运动员中降低最为明显。