跨解剖区域的骨矿物质密度变化:来自全国健康和营养检查调查的见解

IF 2 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Cristina M. Gildee, Patricia Ann Kramer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

骨矿物质密度(BMD)是衡量整体骨骼健康的关键指标,对营养、激素、免疫、生活方式和遗传因素很敏感,通过这些因素影响骨重塑和与年龄相关的骨密度损失。此外,骨骼通过增加骨矿物质沉积来应对重复的机械负荷,这表明骨负荷的差异可以通过缓冲负重区域对抗年龄相关的吸收来缓和年龄和骨密度之间的关系。我们研究了年龄-骨密度关系在不同骨骼部位以及负重(WBR)和非负重(non-WBR)区域之间是否存在差异。方法全国健康与营养检查调查(NHANES;2007-2018年)使用多元线性回归进行分析,调整了体重指数、性别、种族化群体、社会经济地位、吸烟、饮酒和久坐行为。评估了12个解剖区域的骨密度。结果WBR和非WBR总体上显示出相似的与年龄相关的骨密度下降,尽管这种模式因性别而异。女性在非wbr中表现出更大的与年龄相关的骨密度下降;男性在不同地区之间也表现出类似的负相关。非西班牙裔黑人参与者在每个区域的骨密度都明显高于非西班牙裔白人参与者。社会经济地位和重度吸烟是BMD的有力预测因素。值得注意的是,久坐时间的增加与非wbr患者的骨密度降低完全相关(p < 0.001)。这些结果表明,仅仅习惯性的负荷可能不足以缓冲骨骼对抗与年龄相关的损失。相反,社会和生活方式因素显著调节了年龄与骨密度的关系。采用纵向数据、直接机械载荷测量和骨微结构评估的进一步研究可以帮助阐明影响骨密度的生物力学和社会因素的相互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bone Mineral Density Variation Across Anatomical Regions: Insights From the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey

Objectives

Bone mineral density (BMD), a critical measurement of overall bone health, is sensitive to nutritional, hormonal, immunological, lifestyle, and genetic factors through their impact on bone remodeling and age-related BMD loss. Further, bone responds to repetitive mechanical loading by increasing bone mineral deposition, suggesting that differences in bone loading could moderate associations between age and BMD by buffering weight-bearing regions against age-related resorption. We examine whether age-BMD relationships differ across skeletal sites and between weight-bearing (WBR) and nonweight-bearing (non-WBR) regions.

Methods

Data from adult participants (n = 12,403) of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES; 2007–2018) were analyzed using multivariate linear regression, adjusting for body mass index, gender, racialized group, socioeconomic status, smoking, alcohol consumption, and sedentary behavior. BMD was evaluated across 12 anatomical regions.

Results

WBR and non-WBRs showed similar age-related declines in BMD overall, though this pattern varied by gender. Women showed a steeper age-related BMD decline in non-WBRs; men showed comparable negative associations between regions. Non-Hispanic Black participants had significantly higher BMD in every region than non-Hispanic White participants. Socioeconomic status and heavy smoking were strong predictors of BMD. Notably, increased sedentary time was linked exclusively to lower BMD in non-WBRs (all p < 0.001).

Discussion

These results indicate habitual loading alone may be insufficient to buffer bones against age-related loss. Rather, social and lifestyle factors significantly moderate the age-BMD relationship. Further research employing longitudinal data, direct mechanical loading measurements, and bone microarchitecture assessments could help clarify the interplay of biomechanical and social factors influencing BMD.

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