Wong Andy Ko, Pokhoy Anthony, Chandrakumar Abinaa, Cvejkus Ryan K, Zmuda Joseph M
Centre of Excellence in Skeletal Health Assessment, Joint Department of Medical Imaging University Health Network Toronto Ontario Canada.
Toronto General Hospital Research Institute, University Health Network Toronto Ontario Canada.
JBMR Plus. 2020 Oct 1;4(10):e10406. doi: 10.1002/jbm4.10406. eCollection 2020 Oct.
Little is known about the time course of muscle-bone effects and whether a reciprocal clinical effect of bone on muscle is present. We hypothesized that lean mass (LM) measures at the arms and legs have a stronger relationship with BMD measured within the same region than the reciprocal effect. The Tobago Bone Health Study was used to address this hypothesis, examining body composition data from total body DXA scans obtained at 0, 48-, and 120-month visits. A longitudinal analysis of LM, LM/height (LMI), and LM/BMI was conducted at the upper and lower extremities separately, in relation to BMD within the corresponding region. A cross-lagged panel model was used to study pathways from 0 to 120 months for muscle-bone and bone-muscle effects within the same visit, and across each lagged period. Models accounted for age, height, weight, race, arthritis, prior nontraumatic fracture after age 40, number of units of alcohol consumed per week, current smoking, diagnosis of diabetes mellitus, amount of walking in the last week, grip strength, and hospitalizations. Significant models demonstrating parsimony, and meeting absolute and relative fit criteria were retained. Among 1286 Afro-Caribbean men (mean age: 53 ± 9 years, BMI: 27.43 ± 4.23 kg/m) with data available for all visits, LM, LMI, and LM/BMI had modest contemporaneous relationships with BMD, which dissipated with lagged time. The size of these effects was stronger at the legs than at the arms. These lagged effects were primarily mediated through indirect same time-point muscle-bone relations rather than a true directly lagged effect. Bone density showed only a small effect on LM arm measures across lagged time, but this was impossible to tease-out from same time-point relations. These results suggest muscle-bone relationships are not long-lasting at least beyond 48 months. Efforts to maintain muscle and bone strength should focus on shorter-term interventions. More studies are needed with serial bone-muscle imaging over shorter periods. © 2020 The Authors. published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
关于肌肉与骨骼相互影响的时间进程以及骨骼对肌肉是否存在反向临床影响,我们所知甚少。我们假设,与反向影响相比,手臂和腿部的瘦体重(LM)测量值与同一区域内测量的骨密度(BMD)之间的关系更为密切。多巴哥骨健康研究用于验证这一假设,该研究分析了在0、48和120个月随访时通过全身双能X线吸收法(DXA)扫描获得的身体成分数据。分别对上肢和下肢的LM、LM/身高(LMI)和LM/体重指数(BMI)进行纵向分析,并与相应区域内的BMD进行关联。采用交叉滞后面板模型研究在同一次随访以及每个滞后时间段内,从0到120个月的肌肉-骨骼和骨骼-肌肉效应的路径。模型考虑了年龄、身高、体重、种族、关节炎、40岁后既往非创伤性骨折、每周饮酒量、当前吸烟情况、糖尿病诊断、上周行走距离、握力以及住院情况。保留了显示简约性并符合绝对和相对拟合标准的显著模型。在所有随访均有数据的1286名非洲加勒比男性(平均年龄:53±9岁,BMI:27.43±4.23kg/m²)中,LM、LMI和LM/BMI与BMD存在适度的同期关系,但这种关系会随着时间滞后而减弱。这些影响在腿部比在手臂更明显。这些滞后效应主要通过间接的同期肌肉-骨骼关系介导,而非真正的直接滞后效应。在滞后时间内,骨密度对上肢LM测量值的影响很小,但这无法从同期关系中区分出来。这些结果表明,至少在48个月之后,肌肉-骨骼关系并不持久。维持肌肉和骨骼强度的努力应侧重于短期干预措施。需要在更短时间内进行更多的肌肉-骨骼连续成像研究。© 2020作者。由Wiley Periodicals LLC代表美国骨与矿物质研究学会出版。