Roe Lauren S, Harrison Stephanie, Cawthon Peggy M, Ensrud Kristine, Gabriel Kelley Pettee, Kado Deborah M, Cauley Jane A
Department of Epidemiology University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health Pittsburgh PA USA.
California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute San Francisco CA USA.
JBMR Plus. 2023 Aug 7;7(12):e10803. doi: 10.1002/jbm4.10803. eCollection 2023 Dec.
Apart from physical activity volume, frequent breaks from sedentary bouts and active bouts may differentially reduce fall and fracture risk. We assessed the longitudinal relationship between frequency of breaks from time spent sedentary and frequency of active bouts with recurrent falls and fractures. The sample included 2918 men aged 79.0 ± 5.1 years with free-living activity (SenseWear Armband) at the Osteoporotic Fractures in Men Study (MrOS) year 7 (2007-2009) visit. Men were divided into quartiles by the number of breaks from sedentary bouts (sedentary bout: 5+ minutes sedentary; <1.5 metabolic equivalents of task [METS]) and separately by active bout frequency (active bout: 5+ minutes of activity; ≥1.5 METS). Recurrent falls (2+ falls/year) and fractures were ascertained by self-report; fractures were radiographically confirmed. Generalized estimating equations estimated the recurrent fall odds, with restricted cubic splines applied to assess nonlinear relationships. Cox proportional hazards models estimated fracture risk. Over 4 years of follow-up after year 7, 1025 (35.1%) men were fallers. Over 8.40 ± 4.10 years of follow-up, 640 (21.9%) men experienced a fracture. There was a significant nonlinear U-shaped relationship between number of breaks from sedentary bouts and recurrent falls ( < 0.001); compared with men with few breaks from sedentary bouts (1.4-<13.6), the odds of recurrent falls were lower with a moderate number (13.6-<17.0, odds ratio [OR] = 0.82, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.66, 1.01; 17.0-<20.4, OR = 0.79, 95% CI 0.64, 0.99), but not with the highest number of breaks from sedentary bouts (20.4-34.6, OR = 1.01, 95% CI 0.81, 1.27). Results remained borderline significant after adjusting for total sedentary time. Men with the highest compared with the lowest number of breaks from sedentary bouts had a lower fracture risk, but the association was attenuated after adjustment for total sedentary time. No associations were observed for active bout frequency. In conclusion, breaking up extended periods of sedentary time reduces fall risk regardless of total sedentary time. © 2023 The Authors. published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
除了体力活动量之外,经常从久坐时段和活跃时段中进行休息,可能会不同程度地降低跌倒和骨折风险。我们评估了久坐时间的休息频率和活跃时段频率与复发性跌倒和骨折之间的纵向关系。样本包括2918名79.0±5.1岁的男性,他们在男性骨质疏松性骨折研究(MrOS)第7年(2007 - 2009年)访视时进行自由生活活动监测(使用SenseWear臂带)。男性按久坐时段的休息次数(久坐时段:连续久坐5分钟以上;代谢当量任务[METS]<1.5)分为四分位数,同时按活跃时段频率(活跃时段:活动5分钟以上;METS≥1.5)分别分组。复发性跌倒(每年2次以上跌倒)和骨折通过自我报告确定;骨折经影像学确认。广义估计方程估计复发性跌倒的几率,并应用受限立方样条来评估非线性关系。Cox比例风险模型估计骨折风险。在第7年后的4年随访中,1025名(35.1%)男性有跌倒情况。在8.40±4.10年的随访中,640名(21.9%)男性发生了骨折。久坐时段的休息次数与复发性跌倒之间存在显著的非线性U型关系(<0.001);与久坐休息次数少的男性(1.4 - <13.6次)相比,中等次数(13.6 - <17.0次,比值比[OR]=0.82,95%置信区间[CI]0.66,1.01;17.0 - <20.4次,OR = 0.79,95% CI 0.64,0.99)的男性复发性跌倒几率较低,但久坐休息次数最多(20.4 - 34.6次)的男性并非如此(OR = 1.01,95% CI 0.81,1.27)。在调整总久坐时间后,结果仍接近显著。与久坐休息次数最少的男性相比,久坐休息次数最多的男性骨折风险较低,但在调整总久坐时间后,这种关联减弱。未观察到活跃时段频率与跌倒和骨折之间的关联。总之,无论总久坐时间如何,打破长时间的久坐都能降低跌倒风险。© 2023作者。由Wiley Periodicals LLC代表美国骨与矿物质研究学会出版。