Travison Thomas G, Araujo Andre B, Esche Gretchen R, Beck Thomas J, McKinlay John B
New England Research Institutes, Watertown, Massachusetts 02472, USA.
J Bone Miner Res. 2008 Feb;23(2):189-98. doi: 10.1359/jbmr.071016.
Obesity is suspected to confer protection against fracture, but evidence is mixed. We examined proximal femur geometry and body composition measures in a diverse group of 1171 men (30-79 yr of age). Analyses showed that nonbone lean mass, but not fat mass, is independently associated with measures of proximal femur density, axial and bending strength, and resistance to buckling.
Obesity is often said to confer protection against fracture, but the mechanisms driving such an association remain poorly understood. We hypothesized that the effect of increased body mass on bone structure would be accounted for by total and/or appendicular nonbone lean mass, and that once these trends were removed, fat mass would show no protective influence. To test this hypothesis, we examined body composition and geometric indices of proximal femur strength in an ethnically diverse (black, Hispanic, and white) sample of randomly selected men, 30-79 yr of age.
Data were obtained from N = 1171 community-dwelling subjects enrolled in the cross-sectional Boston Area Community Health/Bone study. Body composition was obtained by DXA. Hip geometry parameters at the narrow neck, intertrochanter, and shaft were obtained using Hip Structural Analysis of DXA images. These measures included BMD, bone material in cross-sections (cross-sectional area), bending strength (section modulus), and propensity to buckle under compression (average buckling ratio). Analyses controlled for age, race/ethnicity, height, and physical activity.
In exploratory analyses, lean mass, fat mass, and BMI were each positively associated with hip strength. However, controlling for lean mass was sufficient to remove the positive, and induce a negative, association for fat mass or BMI. Associations between lean mass and hip strength were strongest and resistant to control for other measures. Lean mass alone was sufficient to account for a substantial proportion of racial/ethnic difference in hip strength measures, whereas fat mass exhibited no comparable explanatory power.
The positive association between relative weight and proximal femur strength is accounted for by lean mass, suggesting that, in men, the protective effect of BMI in preventing fracture is mediated not by adipose tissue but by the influence of increased muscle mass accompanying elevated BMI.
肥胖被认为对骨折有保护作用,但证据并不一致。我们在1171名年龄在30至79岁的不同男性群体中,研究了股骨近端几何结构和身体成分测量指标。分析表明,非骨瘦体重而非脂肪量,与股骨近端密度、轴向和弯曲强度以及抗屈曲能力的测量指标独立相关。
人们常说肥胖对骨折有保护作用,但导致这种关联的机制仍知之甚少。我们假设体重增加对骨骼结构的影响将由全身和/或附属非骨瘦体重来解释,并且一旦去除这些趋势,脂肪量将不会显示出保护作用。为了验证这一假设,我们在一个年龄在30至79岁、种族多样(黑人、西班牙裔和白人)的随机选择男性样本中,研究了身体成分和股骨近端强度的几何指数。
数据来自参与横断面波士顿地区社区健康/骨骼研究的N = 1171名社区居住受试者。通过双能X线吸收法(DXA)获得身体成分。使用DXA图像的髋部结构分析获得髋部在窄颈、转子间和骨干处的几何参数。这些测量指标包括骨密度、横截面的骨材料(横截面积)、弯曲强度(截面模量)以及受压时的屈曲倾向(平均屈曲比)。分析对年龄、种族/族裔、身高和身体活动进行了控制。
在探索性分析中,瘦体重、脂肪量和体重指数(BMI)均与髋部强度呈正相关。然而,控制瘦体重足以消除脂肪量或BMI的正相关,并导致负相关。瘦体重与髋部强度之间的关联最强,并且在控制其他测量指标时具有抗性。仅瘦体重就足以解释髋部强度测量指标中相当大比例的种族/族裔差异,而脂肪量则没有类似的解释力。
相对体重与股骨近端强度之间的正相关是由瘦体重解释的,这表明在男性中,BMI在预防骨折方面的保护作用不是由脂肪组织介导的,而是由BMI升高伴随的肌肉量增加的影响介导的。