Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.
Department of Twin Research and Genetic Epidemiology, King's College London, UK.
J Bone Miner Res. 2016 Feb;31(2):317-25. doi: 10.1002/jbmr.2692. Epub 2015 Sep 11.
Age-related loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength are risk factors for sarcopenia, osteoporosis, falls, fractures, frailty, and mortality. Dietary magnesium (Mg) could play a role in prevention of age-related loss of skeletal muscle mass, power, and strength directly through physiological mechanisms or indirectly through an impact on chronic low-grade inflammation, itself a risk factor for loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength. In a cross-sectional study of 2570 women aged 18 to 79 years, we examined associations between intakes of Mg, estimated using a food-frequency questionnaire (FFQ), dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA)-derived measures of muscle mass (fat-free mass as a percentage of body weight [FFM%], fat-free mass index [FFMI, kg/m(2)]), leg explosive power (LEP), and grip strength (n = 949 only). We also examined associations between circulating hs-CRP (C-reactive protein) and muscle mass and LEP, and explored the potential attenuation of these relationships by Mg. We compared our findings with those of age and protein intake. Endpoints were calculated by quintile of Mg and adjusted for relevant confounders. Significant positive associations were found between a higher Mg and indices of skeletal muscle mass and LEP, and also with hs-CRP, after adjustment for covariates. Contrasting extreme quintiles of Mg intake showed differences of 2.6% for FFM% (p trend < 0.001), 0.4 kg/m(2) for FFMI (p trend = 0.005), and 19.6 watts/kg for LEP (p trend < 0.001). Compared with protein, these positive associations were 7 times greater for FFM% and 2.5 times greater for LEP. We also found that higher hs-CRP was negatively associated with skeletal muscle mass and, in statistical modeling, that a higher dietary Mg attenuated this negative relationship by 6.5%, with greater attenuation in women older than 50 years. No association was found between Mg and grip strength. Our results suggest that dietary magnesium may aid conservation of age-related loss of skeletal muscle mass and power in women of all ages.
年龄相关的骨骼肌质量和力量损失是肌少症、骨质疏松症、跌倒、骨折、虚弱和死亡的危险因素。膳食镁(Mg)可以通过生理机制直接在预防与年龄相关的骨骼肌质量、力量和功能下降方面发挥作用,或者通过对慢性低度炎症的影响间接发挥作用,而慢性低度炎症本身就是骨骼肌质量和力量下降的一个危险因素。在一项对 2570 名 18 至 79 岁女性的横断面研究中,我们使用食物频率问卷(FFQ)来评估镁摄入量,并用双能 X 射线吸收法(DXA)测量肌肉质量(体重的无脂肪量百分比[FFM%]、无脂肪量指数[FFMI,kg/m2])、腿部爆发力(LEP)和握力(仅 949 人)来评估镁摄入量与肌肉质量和 LEP 的相关性。我们还评估了循环 hs-CRP(C 反应蛋白)与肌肉质量和 LEP 的相关性,并探讨了镁对这些关系的潜在调节作用。我们将我们的发现与年龄和蛋白质摄入量的发现进行了比较。终点通过 Mg 的五分位数计算,并根据相关混杂因素进行调整。在调整了混杂因素后,我们发现较高的镁与骨骼肌质量和 LEP 的指数呈正相关,与 hs-CRP 也呈正相关。与镁摄入量的极端五分位数相比,FFM%的差异为 2.6%(趋势 p<0.001),FFMI 的差异为 0.4 kg/m2(趋势 p=0.005),LEP 的差异为 19.6 瓦/kg(趋势 p<0.001)。与蛋白质相比,FFM%的正相关关系高出 7 倍,LEP 的正相关关系高出 2.5 倍。我们还发现,hs-CRP 与骨骼肌质量呈负相关,并且在统计学模型中,较高的膳食镁通过 6.5%的方式减弱了这种负相关关系,在年龄超过 50 岁的女性中这种减弱作用更大。镁与握力之间没有关联。我们的结果表明,膳食镁可能有助于维持所有年龄段女性的与年龄相关的骨骼肌质量和力量的下降。