The role of muscular fitness on bone mineral content and areal bone mineral density in youth with type 1 diabetes.

Jacinto Muñoz-Pardeza, Luis Gracia-Marco, José Francisco López-Gil, Ignacio Hormazábal-Aguayo, Nidia Huerta-Uribe, Andres Marmol-Perez, Yasmin Ezzatvar, Mikel Izquierdo, Antonio García-Hermoso
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Abstract

Context: Type 1 diabetes in youth increases the risk of compromised bone health due to glycemic dysregulation. Muscular fitness may play a role in improving bone health during growth.

Objective: This study aimed to investigate the association between muscular fitness and bone health in youth with type 1 diabetes.

Methods: A total of 83 young individuals with type 1 diabetes (aged 6-18 years; 44.6% girls) from the Diactive-1 cohort study were followed for two years. Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry whole-body scans were used to assess bone mineral content (BMC) and areal bone mineral density (aBMD) for the total body less head (TBLH), arms, legs, pelvis, and spine. Muscular fitness (handgrip strength, 1-RM, and muscle power) was assessed with a dynamometer and eGYM devices. Handgrip strength and TBLH bone parameters were age- and sex-standardized using the FitBack Project and BMD Childhood Study, respectively.

Results: Linear mixed models showed longitudinal associations of handgrip strength with TBLH-BMC ([B]=17.18, 95%CI 12.47-21.90) and TBLH-aBMD (B=0.004, 95%CI 0.002-0.006); RM with TBLH-BMC (B=20.09, 95%CI 10.88-29.31) and TBLH-aBMD (B=0.007, 95%CI 0.004-0.011); and power with TBLH-BMC (B=26.80, 95%CI: 17.31-36.28) and TBLH-aBMD (B=0.009, 95%CI 0.005-0.012). Comparable results were observed across the other regions (p<0.05). Additionally, analyses with standardized data confirmed the relationships of handgrip z-scores with TBLH-BMC z-scores (B=0.19, 95%CI 0.08-0.30) and TBLH-aBMD z-scores (B=0.350, 95%CI: 0.210-0.490).

Conclusion: In pediatric patients with type 1 diabetes, increasing muscular fitness could serve as a complementary therapeutic strategy to preserve or enhance bone health.

肌肉健身对青年1型糖尿病患者骨矿物质含量和骨矿物质密度的影响。
背景:青少年1型糖尿病会增加由于血糖调节异常导致骨骼健康受损的风险。在生长过程中,肌肉健康可能在改善骨骼健康方面发挥作用。目的:探讨青年1型糖尿病患者肌肉健康与骨骼健康的关系。方法:共83例年轻1型糖尿病患者(6-18岁;来自Diactive-1队列研究的44.6%的女孩被跟踪了两年。采用双能x线吸收仪全身扫描评估全身不含头部(TBLH)、手臂、腿部、骨盆和脊柱的骨矿物质含量(BMC)和面骨矿物质密度(aBMD)。肌肉健康(握力、1-RM和肌肉力量)用测功机和eGYM设备进行评估。握力和TBLH骨参数分别使用FitBack项目和BMD儿童研究进行年龄和性别标准化。结果:线性混合模型显示,握力与TBLH-BMC ([B]=17.18, 95%CI 12.47 ~ 21.90)和TBLH-aBMD (B=0.004, 95%CI 0.002 ~ 0.006)存在纵向关联;合并TBLH-BMC (B=20.09, 95%CI 10.88 ~ 29.31)和TBLH-aBMD (B=0.007, 95%CI 0.004 ~ 0.011)的RM;TBLH-BMC (B=26.80, 95%CI: 17.31 ~ 36.28)和TBLH-aBMD (B=0.009, 95%CI 0.005 ~ 0.012)的功率。在其他地区也观察到类似的结果(结论:在1型糖尿病儿童患者中,增加肌肉健康可以作为一种补充治疗策略,以保持或增强骨骼健康。
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