WEIGHT-BEARING EXERCISE AND GROUND REACTION FORCES - A 12-MONTH RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL OF EFFECTS ON BONE-MINERAL DENSITY IN HEALTHY POSTMENOPAUSAL WOMEN

Citation
Ej. Bassey et Sj. Ramsdale, WEIGHT-BEARING EXERCISE AND GROUND REACTION FORCES - A 12-MONTH RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL OF EFFECTS ON BONE-MINERAL DENSITY IN HEALTHY POSTMENOPAUSAL WOMEN, Bone, 16(4), 1995, pp. 469-476
Citations number
43
Categorie Soggetti
Endocrynology & Metabolism
Journal title
BoneACNP
ISSN journal
87563282
Volume
16
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
469 - 476
Database
ISI
SICI code
8756-3282(1995)16:4<469:WEAGRF>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
The effects of brief daily exercise on bone mineral density (BMD) were assessed in a randomized controlled trial in 44 healthy postmenopausa l women using weight-bearing exercise in a regimen adapted from osteog enic protocols reported in animal studies. BMD was assessed masked usi ng dual energy X-ray absorptiometry at 0, 6, and 12 months. The sites assessed were the proximal femur (neck, Ward's triangle, and trochante r) and the lateral spine (L2-3) to assess the effects of the exercise, and the radius (ultradistal and 33% distal) as a marker for systemic effects. The test group was required to perform 50 ''heel drops'' dail y at home (raising the body weight onto the toes and then letting it d rop to the floor keeping the knees and hips extended) and to attend a weekly class of mixed exercises, which included some high-impact activ ity. The control group also attended a weekly exercise class run by th e same teacher, which included only low-impact activity, and did flexi bility exercises at home daily. The ground reaction forces (as a ratio of body weight) during heel drops were 2.5 to 3.0 N/N, with a rate of rise of 50-100 kN/sec. A patient with an instrumented femoral implant allowed comparison of compressive axial forces in the shaft of the pr oximal femur with the ground reaction forces, and these appeared to be transmitted undamped to the shaft of the femur. Initial analysis of B MD in the women showed no significant increases after 12 months of exe rcise at any site in either group, and the groups did not differ signi ficantly from each other in this respect. Proximity to menopause was n ot associated with rapid bone loss, and in those who were more than 6 years postmenopausal, there was evidence for a maintenance effect of t he exercise in the test group. Compliance (83%) and increases in leg e xtensor power (15%) were similar in both groups, and when they were co mbined, BMD was maintained at the trochanter but fell significantly at the radius (p < 0.001).