Department of Health Sciences, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland.
J Bone Miner Res. 2010 Nov;25(11):2341-9. doi: 10.1002/jbmr.136.
Body weight and lean mass correlate with bone mass, but the relationship between fat mass and bone remains elusive. The study population consisted of 396 girls and 138 premenopausal mothers and 114 postmenopausal grandmothers of these girls. Body composition and tibial length were assessed using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), and bone traits were determined at the tibia using peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT) in the girls at the ages of 11.2 ± 0.8, 13.2 ± 0.9, and 18.3 ± 1.0 years and in the mothers (44.7 ± 4.1 years) and grandmothers (70.7 ± 6.3 years). The values of relative bone strength index (RBSI), an index reflecting the ratio of bone strength to the load applied on the tibia, were correlated among family members (all p < .05). The mean values of RBSI were similar among 11- and 18-year-old girls and premenopausal women but significantly lower in 13-year-old girls and postmenopausal women. However, in each age group, subjects in the highest BMI tertiles had the lowest RBSI values (all p < .01). RBSI was inversely associated with body weight (all p < .01), indicating a deficit in bone strength relative to the applied load from greater body weight. RBSI was inversely associated with fat mass (all p < .001) across age groups and generations but remained relatively constant with increasing lean mass in girls and premenopausal women (all p > .05), indicating that the bone-strength deficit was attributable to increased fat mass, not lean mass. Moreover, the adverse effect of fat mass was age-dependent, with every unit increase in fat mass associated with a greater decrease in RBSI in pre- and postmenopausal women than in girls (all p < .001). This is largely due to the different capacity of young and adult bones to increase diaphyseal width by periosteal apposition in response to increased load. In summary, increasing body weight with fat accumulation is accompanied by an age-dependent relative bone-strength deficit in women because the beneficial effects of increased fat mass on bone, if any, do not compensate for the mechanical burden that it imposes.
体重和瘦体重与骨量相关,但脂肪量与骨量的关系仍难以捉摸。研究人群包括 396 名女孩和 138 名女孩的绝经前母亲以及 114 名女孩的绝经后祖母。采用双能 X 射线吸收法(DXA)评估身体成分和胫骨长度,在女孩 11.2±0.8 岁、13.2±0.9 岁和 18.3±1.0 岁以及母亲(44.7±4.1 岁)和祖母(70.7±6.3 岁)时,使用外周定量计算机断层扫描(pQCT)测定胫骨的骨特性。家庭成员之间存在相对骨强度指数(RBSI)值的相关性(所有 p<.05)。RBSI 均值在 11 岁和 18 岁女孩和绝经前女性中相似,但在 13 岁女孩和绝经后女性中显著降低。然而,在每个年龄组中,BMI 最高 tertile 的受试者的 RBSI 值最低(所有 p<.01)。RBSI 与体重呈负相关(所有 p<.01),表明与更大体重施加的负荷相比,骨强度存在不足。RBSI 与脂肪量呈负相关(所有 p<.001),跨越年龄组和代际,但在女孩和绝经前女性中,随着瘦体重的增加,RBSI 相对保持不变(所有 p>.05),表明骨强度不足归因于脂肪量增加,而不是瘦体重。此外,脂肪量的不良影响是年龄依赖性的,与女孩相比,绝经前和绝经后女性中每增加一个单位的脂肪量与 RBSI 更大的降低相关(所有 p<.001)。这在很大程度上是由于年轻和成年骨骼对增加的负荷通过骨膜内骨增加骨干宽度的能力不同。总之,随着脂肪堆积而增加体重会导致女性的年龄相关的相对骨强度不足,因为如果有的话,脂肪量对骨骼的有益影响不能弥补其施加的机械负担。