Mayhew Paul M, Thomas C David, Clement John G, Loveridge Nigel, Beck Thomas J, Bonfield William, Burgoyne Chris J, Reeve Jonathan
Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Lancet. 2005;366(9480):129-35. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(05)66870-5.
Hip fracture risk rises 100 to 1000-fold over 60 years of ageing. Loss of resistance to bending is not a major feature of normal ageing of the femoral neck. Another cause of fragility is local buckling or elastic instability. Bones adapt to their local experience of mechanical loading. The suggestion that bipedalism allows thinning of the underloaded superolateral femoral neck cortex arises from the failure of walking to transmit much mechanical load to this region. We aimed to measure whether elastic instability increases greatly with age since it might trigger hip fracture in a sideways fall.
We measured with computed tomography the distribution of bone in the mid-femoral neck of 77 proximal femurs from people who died suddenly aged 20-95 years. We then calculated the critical stress, from the geometric properties and density of the cortical zone most highly loaded in a sideways fall, as a threshold for elastic instability.
With normal ageing, this thin cortical zone in the upper femoral neck became substantially thinner. Relative to mean values at age 60 years, female cortical thickness declined by 6.4% (SD 1.1) per decade (p<0.0001), and critical stress by 13.2% (4.3) per decade (p=0.004) in the superoposterior octant compressed most in a sideways fall. Similar, but significantly smaller, effects were evident in men (p=0.004). This thinning compromised the capacity of the femur to absorb energy independently of osteoporosis. Patients with hip fracture had further reduced stability.
As women age, hip fragility increases because underloading of the superolateral cortex leads to atrophic thinning. Because walking does not sufficiently load the upper femoral neck, the fragile zones in healthy bones may need strengthening, for example with more well targeted exercise.
在60年的衰老过程中,髋部骨折风险会增加100至1000倍。股骨颈正常衰老的主要特征并非抗弯能力下降。脆性增加的另一个原因是局部屈曲或弹性不稳定。骨骼会根据其局部机械负荷情况进行适应性变化。双足行走导致股骨颈上外侧皮质负荷不足从而变薄这一观点,源于行走过程中未能将大量机械负荷传递至该区域。我们旨在测量弹性不稳定是否会随着年龄大幅增加,因为它可能在侧方跌倒时引发髋部骨折。
我们使用计算机断层扫描测量了77例年龄在20 - 95岁之间突然死亡者近端股骨股骨颈中部的骨分布情况。然后根据侧方跌倒时负荷最大的皮质区域的几何特性和密度计算临界应力,将其作为弹性不稳定的阈值。
随着正常衰老,股骨颈上部这个薄皮质区域变得明显更薄。相对于60岁时的平均值,在侧方跌倒时受压最大的上后象限,女性皮质厚度每十年下降6.4%(标准差1.1)(p<0.0001),临界应力每十年下降13.2%(4.3)(p = 0.004)。男性也有类似但明显较小的影响(p = 0.004)。这种变薄损害了股骨独立于骨质疏松症吸收能量的能力。髋部骨折患者的稳定性进一步降低。
随着女性年龄增长,髋部脆性增加是因为上外侧皮质负荷不足导致萎缩性变薄。由于行走未能充分负荷股骨颈上部,健康骨骼中的脆弱区域可能需要加强,例如通过更有针对性的运动。