| Literature DB >> 20663158 |
Riku Nikander1, Harri Sievänen, Ari Heinonen, Robin M Daly, Kirsti Uusi-Rasi, Pekka Kannus.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Exercise is widely recommended to reduce osteoporosis, falls and related fragility fractures, but its effect on whole bone strength has remained inconclusive. The primary purpose of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to evaluate the effects of long-term supervised exercise (> or =6 months) on estimates of lower-extremity bone strength from childhood to older age.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20663158 PMCID: PMC2918523 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-8-47
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Characteristics of the evaluated 10 trials investigating exercise effects on bone strengtha
| Reference | Population | Intervention | Site Measured | Measurement Technique |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Macdonald et al. [ | EX: N = 281, CON: N = 129 | EX: 1 step: 15 min of physical activity (PA) 5 times per week | Distal tibia | pQCT |
| Macdonald et al. [ | EX: N = 293, CON: N = 117, | EX: 1 step: 15 min of PA 5 times per week | Hip | DXA-derived |
| MacKelvie et al. [ | EX: N = 31, CON: N = 33, | EX: 10-12 min of high-impact PA 3 times per week | Hip | DXA-derived |
| Petit et al. [ | EX: N = 87, CON: N = 90, | EX: 10-12 min of high-impact PA 3 times per week | Hip | DXA-derived |
| Weeks et al. [ | EX: N = 52, CON: N = 47 | EX: 10-min high-impact PA 2 times per week | Hip | DXA-derived estimation of cross- |
| Vainionpaa et al. [ | EX: N = 39, CON: N = 41, | EX: 60-min workout classes including steps and hops 3 times per week and 10-min daily steps and hops | Proximal tibia | DXA-derived estimation of cross-sectional moment of inertia (CSMI) |
| Cheng et al. [ | EX: N = 20, CON: N = 20, | EX: Supervised high-impact circuit training session 2 times per week | Tibial midshaft, Proximal tibia | QCT-derived maximum |
| Karinkanta et al. [ | EX: N = 112, CON: N = 37, | EX: Resistance, balance jumping, and their combination group 3 times per week, including at least 50%-60% of repetition maximum (RM) and jumps | Distal tibia, tibial shaft | DXA-derived hip structural analysis |
| Liu-Ambrose et al. [ | EX: N = 66, CON: N = 32 | EX: Resistance and agility training group 2 times per week | Distal tibia, Tibial shaft | pQCT-derived polar stress |
| Uusi-Rasi et al. [ | EX: N = 41, CON: N = 41, | EX: 20-min multidirectional jumps and steps 3 times per week | Distal tibia, tibial shaft | DXA-derived bone strength index (BSI) |
a EX, exercise group; CON, control group; pQCT, peripheral quantitative computed tomography; DXA, dual energy X-ray absorptiometry.
Results of the methodological quality analysis of individual RCTs
| Sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Blinding to group assignment | Incomplete outcome data | Selective outcome reporting | Other potential sources of biasa | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Macdonald et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
| Macdonald et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
| MacKelvie et al. [ | Low risk | Unclear | Low risk | High riskb | Low risk | High riska3 |
| Petit et al. [ | Low risk | Unclear | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | High riska4 |
| Weeks et al. [ | Unclear | Unclear | High riskc | Low risk | Low risk | High riska2,a4 |
| Vainionpaa et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | High riskd | Low risk | Low risk | High riska3 |
| Cheng et al. [ | Low risk | Unclear | High riskd | High riske | Low risk | High riska3 |
| Karinkanta et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | High riskd | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
| Liu-Ambrose et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | High riska2,a4 |
| Uusi-Rasi et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | High riskd | Low risk | Low risk | High riska3 |
aOther potential sources of bias included 1. >5% (even though not significant) imbalance in bone baseline variables that was not adjusted for in the statistical analysis, 2. Possible inadequate exercise dose according to general exercise recommendations (<3×/week), 3. Small sample size (<100 participants) in relation to the measurement precision, and 4. Short follow-up time (<12-months).
bA clear imbalance between withdrawals of controls and trainees in Tanner Stage 1.
cIndividual adolescent pupils randomised rather than schools
dNo supervised sham exercise for controls
eNo intention-to-treat results reported
Figure 1Flow diagram of the search process of exercise RCTs to improve or maintain bone strength.
Figure 2Effects of exercise on indices of bone strength (standard mean difference, 95% CI) in young girls at the distal tibia, tibial shaft and femoral neck. The squares and diamonds represent the test values for individual studies and the overall effect, respectively.
Figure 3Effects of exercise on bone strength (standard mean difference, 95% CI) in young boys at the distal tibia, tibial shaft and femoral neck. The squares and diamonds represent the test values for individual studies and the overall effect, respectively.
Figure 4Effects of exercise on bone strength (standard mean difference, 95% CI) in adolescent boys and girls at the femoral neck. The squares represent the test values for the individual study.
Figure 5Effects of exercise on bone strength (standard mean difference, 95% CI) in premenopausal women at the proximal tibia and femoral midshaft.
Figure 6Effects of exercise on bone strength (standard mean difference, 95% CI) in postmenopausal women at the distal tibia, mid tibia, femoral neck, midfemur and proximal tibia. The squares and diamonds represent the test values for individual studies and the overall effect, respectively.
Figure 7The changes in cortical bone structure in response to exercise at the mid- and distal humerus in female tennis players. The increase in cortical area in the prepubertal players was the result of greater periosteal (outer bone surface) than endocortical (inner bone surface) expansion at the midhumerus, but greater periosteal expansion alone at the distal humerus. During the peri- to postpubertal years, loading resulted in both periosteal expansion and endocortical contraction at both sites (adapted from Bass et al. [44]).
Figure 8Athletes representing high-impact (H-I) and odd-impact (O-I) type of exercise loadings clearly have thicker cortices than their sedentary counterparts at the femoral neck. In a recent cross-sectional study [66], athletes in high-impact sports had 60% thicker inferior cortex; however, athletes representing odd-impact sports had 20% thicker cortex uniformly around the femoral neck, whereas athletes in high-magnitude (H-M), low-impact (L-I), and nonimpact (N-I) sports did not have thicker cortices than their nonathletic counterparts (top) (adapted from Nikander et al. [66]).