Capozza R F, Cointry G R, Cure-Ramírez P, Ferretti J L, Cure-Cure C
Centro de Estudios de Metabolismo Fosfocálcico, Universidad Nacional de Rosario, Argentina.
Bone. 2004 Jul;35(1):283-95. doi: 10.1016/j.bone.2004.03.010.
A whole-body DXA study of 1450 healthy Caucasian individuals [Bone 22 (1998) 683] found that mineral mass, either crude (BMC) or statistically adjusted to fat mass (FM-adjusted BMC), correlated linearly with lean mass (LM, proportional to muscle mass). The results showed similar slopes but decreasing intercepts (ordinate values) in the order: pre-MP women > men > post-MP women > children. This supports the hypothesis that sex hormones influence the control of bone status by muscle strength in all species. Now we further study those relationships in 2512 healthy Hispanic adults (307 men, 753 pre-MP women, 1452 post-MP women), including separate determinations in their upper and lower limbs. The slopes of the BMC or FM-adjusted BMC vs. LM relationships were parallel in all the studied regions. However, region-related differences were found between the ordinates of the curves. In the whole body, the crude-BMC/LM relationships showed the same ordinate differences as previously observed. In the lower limbs, those differences were smaller in magnitude but highly significant, showing the order: pre-MP women > men = post-MP women. In the upper limbs, the decreasing ordinate order was: men > pre-MP women > post-MP women. After fat adjustment of the BMC, order in both limbs was: men > pre-MP women > post-MP women. Parallelism of the curves was maintained in all cases. LM had a larger independent influence on these results than FM, body weight, or age. The parallelism of the curves supports the idea that a common biomechanical control of bones by muscles occurs in humans. Results suggest that sex-hormone-associated differences in DXA-assessed muscle-bone proportionality in humans could vary according to the region studied. This could be related to the different weight-bearing nature of the musculoskeletal structures studied. Besides the obvious anthropometric associations, FM would exert a mechanical effect as a component of body weight, evident in the lower limbs, while muscle contractions would induce a more significant, dynamical effect in both lower and upper limbs. Muscles seem to exert a larger influence than FM, body weight, and age on BMC in the whole body and lower limbs, regardless of the gender and reproductive status of the individual. The muscle-bone relationships studied may provide a rationale for a future differential diagnosis between disuse-related and other types of osteopenia.
一项针对1450名健康白种人的全身双能X线吸收法(DXA)研究[《骨》22(1998年)683页]发现,矿物质含量,无论是原始的(骨矿物质含量,BMC)还是经脂肪量(FM)统计调整后的(FM调整后的BMC),都与瘦体重(LM,与肌肉量成比例)呈线性相关。结果显示,斜率相似,但截距(纵坐标值)呈以下顺序递减:绝经前女性>男性>绝经后女性>儿童。这支持了一种假说,即性激素在所有物种中都会通过肌肉力量影响骨骼状态的控制。现在,我们在2512名健康的西班牙裔成年人(307名男性、753名绝经前女性、1452名绝经后女性)中进一步研究这些关系,包括对他们的上肢和下肢进行单独测定。在所有研究区域中,BMC或FM调整后的BMC与LM关系的斜率都是平行的。然而,可以发现曲线纵坐标之间存在与区域相关的差异。在全身,原始BMC/LM关系显示出与之前观察到的相同的纵坐标差异。在下肢,这些差异在幅度上较小但非常显著,顺序为:绝经前女性>男性 = 绝经后女性。在上肢,纵坐标递减顺序为:男性>绝经前女性>绝经后女性。对BMC进行脂肪调整后,两个肢体的顺序都是:男性>绝经前女性>绝经后女性。在所有情况下曲线都保持平行。与FM、体重或年龄相比,LM对这些结果的独立影响更大。曲线的平行性支持了这样一种观点,即人类骨骼存在由肌肉进行的共同生物力学控制。结果表明,人类中DXA评估的肌肉 - 骨骼比例中与性激素相关的差异可能会因所研究的区域而异。这可能与所研究的肌肉骨骼结构不同的负重性质有关。除了明显的人体测量学关联外,FM作为体重的一个组成部分会产生机械效应,在下肢较为明显;而肌肉收缩在上下肢都会产生更显著且动态的效应。无论个体的性别和生殖状态如何,在全身和下肢,肌肉似乎比FM、体重和年龄对BMC的影响更大。所研究的肌肉 - 骨骼关系可能为未来区分废用性和其他类型的骨质减少提供诊断依据。