Oura Petteri, Junno Juho-Antti, Auvinen Juha, Niinimäki Jaakko, Karppinen Jaro, Ojaniemi Marja, Paananen Markus
Center for Life Course Health Research, Faculty of Medicine University of Oulu Oulu Finland.
Research Unit of Medical Imaging, Physics and Technology, Faculty of Medicine University of Oulu Oulu Finland.
JBMR Plus. 2018 Jul 17;3(1):37-44. doi: 10.1002/jbm4.10065. eCollection 2019 Jan.
Vertebral fracture risk is higher among individuals with small vertebral dimensions. Obesity is a global health problem and may also contribute to bone size and fracture risk. In this work we report the association between life course body mass index (BMI) and vertebral cross-sectional area (CSA) in midlife. The Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966 study with its 46-year follow-up provided the material for this study. A subsample of 780 individuals had attended lumbar magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at the age of 46 years, and had records of objectively measured BMI from the ages of 0, 7, 15, 31, and 46 years. Of these, MRI-derived data on vertebral size was available for 682 individuals. We identified latent lifelong BMI trajectories by performing latent class growth modeling (LCGM) on the BMI data, and then used sex-stratified linear regression models to compare the identified trajectory groups in terms of midlife vertebral CSA. Gestational age, education years, adult height, lifelong physical activity, lifelong smoking history, and adulthood diet were assessed as potential confounders. Three distinct trajectory groups ("stable slim," "stable average," and "early onset overweight") were identified among both sexes. Comparisons to the stable slim trajectory revealed that vertebral CSA was significantly ( < 0.001) larger among the stable average and early onset overweight trajectories (69.8 and 118.6 mm larger among men, 57.7 and 106.1 mm larger among women, respectively). We conclude that lifelong BMI has a positive association with midlife vertebral size among both sexes. Future studies should characterize the mediating factors of this association.
椎体尺寸较小的个体发生椎体骨折的风险更高。肥胖是一个全球性的健康问题,也可能影响骨骼大小和骨折风险。在这项研究中,我们报告了中年时期生命历程体重指数(BMI)与椎体横截面积(CSA)之间的关联。1966年芬兰北部出生队列及其46年的随访为这项研究提供了素材。一个由78名个体组成的子样本在46岁时接受了腰椎磁共振成像(MRI)检查,并且有从0岁、7岁、15岁、31岁和46岁时客观测量的BMI记录。其中,682名个体有MRI得出的椎体大小数据。我们通过对BMI数据进行潜在类别增长模型(LCGM)确定了潜在的终身BMI轨迹,然后使用按性别分层的线性回归模型,比较已确定的轨迹组在中年椎体CSA方面的差异。评估了胎龄、受教育年限、成人身高终身身体活动、终身吸烟史和成年饮食作为潜在混杂因素。在男性和女性中都识别出了三个不同的轨迹组(“稳定苗条型”、“稳定平均型”和“早发超重型”)。与稳定苗条型轨迹相比,结果显示稳定平均型和早发超重型轨迹的椎体CSA显著更大(<0.001)(男性分别大69.8和118.6平方毫米,女性分别大57.7和106.1平方毫米)。我们得出结论,终身BMI与中年男女的椎体大小呈正相关。未来的研究应该对这种关联的中介因素进行特征描述。