Dudley-Javoroski S, Petrie M A, McHenry C L, Amelon R E, Saha P K, Shields R K
Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science, Carver College of Medicine, The University of Iowa, 1-252 Medical Education Building, Iowa City, IA, 52242, USA.
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Osteoporos Int. 2016 Mar;27(3):1149-1160. doi: 10.1007/s00198-015-3326-4. Epub 2015 Sep 22.
This study examined the effect of a controlled dose of vibration upon bone density and architecture in people with spinal cord injury (who eventually develop severe osteoporosis). Very sensitive computed tomography (CT) imaging revealed no effect of vibration after 12 months, but other doses of vibration may still be useful to test.
The purposes of this report were to determine the effect of a controlled dose of vibratory mechanical input upon individual trabecular bone regions in people with chronic spinal cord injury (SCI) and to examine the longitudinal bone architecture changes in both the acute and chronic state of SCI.
Participants with SCI received unilateral vibration of the constrained lower limb segment while sitting in a wheelchair (0.6g, 30 Hz, 20 min, three times weekly). The opposite limb served as a control. Bone mineral density (BMD) and trabecular micro-architecture were measured with high-resolution multi-detector CT. For comparison, one participant was studied from the acute (0.14 year) to the chronic state (2.7 years).
Twelve months of vibration training did not yield adaptations of BMD or trabecular micro-architecture for the distal tibia or the distal femur. BMD and trabecular network length continued to decline at several distal femur sub-regions, contrary to previous reports suggesting a "steady state" of bone in chronic SCI. In the participant followed from acute to chronic SCI, BMD and architecture decline varied systematically across different anatomical segments of the tibia and femur.
This study supports that vibration training, using this study's dose parameters, is not an effective anti-osteoporosis intervention for people with chronic SCI. Using a high-spatial-resolution CT methodology and segmental analysis, we illustrate novel longitudinal changes in bone that occur after spinal cord injury.
本研究考察了控制剂量的振动对脊髓损伤患者(最终会发展为严重骨质疏松症)骨密度和骨结构的影响。非常灵敏的计算机断层扫描(CT)成像显示,12个月后振动没有效果,但其他剂量的振动可能仍值得测试。
本报告的目的是确定控制剂量的振动机械输入对慢性脊髓损伤(SCI)患者个体小梁骨区域的影响,并研究SCI急性和慢性状态下的纵向骨结构变化。
脊髓损伤参与者坐在轮椅上时,对其受约束的下肢节段进行单侧振动(0.6g,30Hz,20分钟,每周三次)。对侧肢体作为对照。使用高分辨率多探测器CT测量骨矿物质密度(BMD)和小梁微结构。为作比较,对一名参与者从急性状态(0.14年)到慢性状态(2.7年)进行了研究。
12个月的振动训练并未使胫骨远端或股骨远端的BMD或小梁微结构产生适应性变化。与之前关于慢性SCI患者骨处于“稳定状态”的报道相反,在股骨远端的几个亚区域,BMD和小梁网络长度持续下降。在从急性SCI到慢性SCI的参与者中,胫骨和股骨不同解剖节段的BMD和结构下降情况存在系统性差异。
本研究支持,使用本研究的剂量参数进行振动训练,对慢性SCI患者而言并非有效的抗骨质疏松干预措施。通过使用高空间分辨率CT方法和节段分析,我们阐述了脊髓损伤后骨骼出现的新的纵向变化。