Borer Katarina T
Division of Kinesiology, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-2214, USA.
Sports Med. 2005;35(9):779-830. doi: 10.2165/00007256-200535090-00004.
Osteoporosis is a serious health problem that diminishes quality of life and levies a financial burden on those who fear and experience bone fractures. Physical activity as a way to prevent osteoporosis is based on evidence that it can regulate bone maintenance and stimulate bone formation including the accumulation of mineral, in addition to strengthening muscles, improving balance, and thus reducing the overall risk of falls and fractures. Currently, our understanding of how to use exercise effectively in the prevention of osteoporosis is incomplete. It is uncertain whether exercise will help accumulate more overall peak bone mass during childhood, adolescence and young adulthood. Also, the consistent effectiveness of exercise to increase bone mass, or at least arrest the loss of bone mass after menopause, is also in question. Within this framework, section 1 introduces mechanical characteristics of bones to assist the reader in understanding their responses to physical activity. Section 2 reviews hormonal, nutritional and mechanical factors necessary for the growth of bones in length, width and mineral content that produce peak bone mass in the course of childhood and adolescence using a large sample of healthy Caucasian girls and female adolescents for reference. Effectiveness of exercise is evaluated throughout using absolute changes in bone with the underlying assumption that useful exercise should produce changes that approximate or exceed the absolute magnitude of bone parameters in a healthy reference population. Physical activity increases growth in width and mineral content of bones in girls and adolescent females, particularly when it is initiated before puberty, carried out in volumes and at intensities seen in athletes, and accompanied by adequate caloric and calcium intakes. Similar increases are seen in young women following the termination of statural growth in response to athletic training, but not to more limited levels of physical activity characteristic of longitudinal training studies. After 9-12 months of regular exercise, young adult women often show very small benefits to bone health, possibly because of large subject attrition rates, inadequate exercise intensity, duration or frequency, or because at this stage of life accumulation of bone mass may be at its natural peak. The important influence of hormones as well as dietary and specific nutrient abundance on bone growth and health are emphasised, and premature bone loss associated with dietary restriction and estradiol withdrawal in exercise-induced amenorrhoea is described. In section 3, the same assessment is applied to the effects of physical activity in postmenopausal women. Studies of postmenopausal women are presented from the perspective of limitations of the capacity of the skeleton to adapt to mechanical stress of exercise due to altered hormonal status and inadequate intake of specific nutrients. After menopause, effectiveness of exercise to increase bone mineral depends heavily on adequate availability of dietary calcium. Relatively infrequent evidence that physical activity prevents bone loss or increases bone mineral after menopause may be a consequence of inadequate calcium availability or low intensity of exercise in training studies. Several studies with postmenopausal women show modest increases in bone mineral toward the norm seen in a healthy population in response to high-intensity training. Physical activities continue to stimulate increases in bone diameter throughout the lifespan. These exercise-stimulated increases in bone diameter diminish the risk of fractures by mechanically counteracting the thinning of bones and increases in bone porosity. Seven principles of bone adaptation to mechanical stress are reviewed in section 4 to suggest how exercise by human subjects could be made more effective. They posit that exercise should: (i) be dynamic, not static; (ii) exceed a threshold intensity; (iii) exceed a threshold strain frequency; (iv) be relatively brief but intermittent; (v) impose an unusual loading pattern on the bones; (vi) be supported by unlimited nutrient energy; and (vii) include adequate calcium and cholecalciferol (vitamin D3) availability.
骨质疏松症是一个严重的健康问题,它会降低生活质量,并给那些担心和经历过骨折的人带来经济负担。体育活动作为预防骨质疏松症的一种方式,其依据是它不仅可以增强肌肉、改善平衡,从而降低跌倒和骨折的总体风险,还能调节骨骼维持并刺激骨骼形成,包括矿物质的积累。目前,我们对如何有效利用运动预防骨质疏松症的理解并不完整。运动是否有助于在儿童期、青春期和年轻成年期积累更多的总体峰值骨量尚不确定。此外,运动增加骨量,或者至少阻止绝经后骨量流失的持续有效性也存在疑问。在此框架内,第1节介绍骨骼的力学特性,以帮助读者理解它们对体育活动的反应。第2节回顾了骨骼在长度、宽度和矿物质含量方面生长所需的激素、营养和力学因素,这些因素在儿童期和青春期会产生峰值骨量,参考了大量健康的白种女孩和女性青少年样本。在整个过程中,运动的有效性是通过骨骼的绝对变化来评估的,其潜在假设是,有效的运动应该产生与健康参考人群中骨骼参数的绝对幅度相近或超过该幅度的变化。体育活动能增加女孩和青春期女性骨骼的宽度和矿物质含量的增长,特别是在青春期前开始、以运动员的运动量和强度进行,并且伴有足够热量和钙摄入的情况下。在身高增长结束后,年轻女性因运动训练对骨骼的影响与纵向训练研究中更有限的体育活动水平不同。经过9至12个月的规律运动后,年轻成年女性对骨骼健康的益处通常非常小,这可能是由于受试者流失率高、运动强度、持续时间或频率不足,或者因为在这个生命阶段骨量积累可能已达到自然峰值。文中强调了激素以及饮食和特定营养素丰富度对骨骼生长和健康的重要影响,并描述了运动性闭经中与饮食限制和雌二醇撤药相关的过早骨质流失。在第3节中,同样的评估方法被应用于绝经后女性体育活动的效果。从骨骼因激素状态改变和特定营养素摄入不足而适应运动机械应力的能力有限的角度,介绍了绝经后女性的研究。绝经后,运动增加骨矿物质的有效性很大程度上取决于饮食中钙的充足供应。相对较少有证据表明体育活动能预防绝经后骨质流失或增加骨矿物质,这可能是由于训练研究中钙供应不足或运动强度低所致。几项针对绝经后女性的研究表明,如果进行高强度训练,可以使骨矿物质适度增加,接近健康人群的正常水平。体育活动在整个生命周期中持续刺激骨骼直径增加。这些运动刺激的骨骼直径增加通过机械方式抵消骨骼变薄和骨孔隙率增加,从而降低骨折风险。第4节回顾了骨骼适应机械应力的七条原则,以说明如何使人体运动更有效。这些原则认为,运动应该:(i)是动态的,而非静态的;(ii)超过阈值强度;(iii)超过阈值应变频率;(iv)相对短暂但间歇性进行;(v)对骨骼施加不寻常的负荷模式;(vi)有不受限制的营养能量支持;(vii)包括充足的钙和胆钙化醇(维生素D3)供应。