Bone mineral density is not associated with incident high-intensity back pain: a 10-year cohort study in men

IF 3.4 Q2 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
JBMR Plus Pub Date : 2024-06-10 DOI:10.1093/jbmrpl/ziae076
M. Estee, Yuanyuan Wang, S. Heritier, D. Urquhart, F. Cicuttini, M. Kotowicz, K. Anderson, S. Brennan-Olsen, J. Pasco, A. Wluka
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Abstract

Although patients believe osteoporosis is a painful condition, health professionals assume it is painless unless a fracture occurs. The association between bone mineral density (BMD) and back-pain has not been examined longitudinally in community-based adults in an unbiased population, using gold standard measures. This study aimed to examine the association between BMD and incident high-intensity back pain and/or high-disability over 10 years in Australian men without high-intensity symptoms at baseline. Men with no high-intensity back pain and/or high-disability attending the Geelong Osteoporosis Study at the 5-year visit (2006-2010) (considered the baseline for the current study), were followed for 10 years (2016-2021). Back pain and disability were assessed using the Graded Chronic Pain Scale at both time points. At baseline, dual energy X-ray absorptiometry was used to measure lumbar spine and total hip BMD and spinal artefacts. The relationships between BMD and incident high-intensity pain and/or high-disability at follow-up were examined using binary logistic regression, adjusted for age, body mass index, depression, education, smoking, mobility and spinal artefacts. Six hundred and seventy-nine participants had no to low-intensity pain and/or no to low-disability at baseline. Four hundred and forty-one attended follow-up, providing back pain and disability data. Thirty-seven men developed high-intensity pain and/or high-disability. No association of BMD at any site was seen with incident high-intensity pain and/or high-disability. BMD was not associated with incident high-intensity pain or disability in community-based men. These data provide evidence to dispel the erroneous community-held belief that low BMD is related to back-pain and disability.
骨矿物质密度与高强度背痛事件无关:一项为期 10 年的男性队列研究
尽管患者认为骨质疏松症是一种痛苦的疾病,但医疗专业人员却认为除非发生骨折,否则骨质疏松症是无痛的。目前还没有采用金标准测量方法,对社区成年人中无偏见人群的骨矿物质密度(BMD)与背痛之间的关系进行纵向研究。本研究旨在研究基线时无高强度症状的澳大利亚男性的骨密度与10年内发生的高强度背痛和/或高致残率之间的关系。研究人员对参加吉隆骨质疏松症研究(Geelong Osteoporosis Study)并在 5 年访问(2006-2010 年)(被视为本次研究的基线)中没有出现高强度背痛和/或高残疾的男性进行了为期 10 年(2016-2021 年)的随访。在两个时间点均使用慢性疼痛分级量表评估背痛和残疾情况。基线时,采用双能 X 射线吸收测量法测量腰椎和全髋 BMD 以及脊柱伪影。在对年龄、体重指数、抑郁、教育、吸烟、活动能力和脊柱假象进行调整后,采用二元逻辑回归法对 BMD 与随访时发生的高强度疼痛和/或高残疾之间的关系进行了研究。六百七十九名参与者在基线时没有低强度疼痛和/或没有低度残疾。441 人参加了随访,提供了背痛和残疾数据。37名男性出现了高强度疼痛和/或高度残疾。任何部位的 BMD 都与高强度疼痛和/或高度残疾无关。在社区男性中,BMD 与高强度疼痛或残疾事件无关。这些数据提供了证据,消除了社区所持有的 "低 BMD 与背痛和残疾有关 "的错误观念。
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来源期刊
JBMR Plus
JBMR Plus Medicine-Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
2.60%
发文量
103
审稿时长
8 weeks
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