Greater association of peak neuromuscular performance with cortical bone geometry, bone mass and bone strength than bone density: a study in 417 older women
Version 2 2024-06-05, 05:04Version 2 2024-06-05, 05:04
Version 1 2015-11-12, 16:03Version 1 2015-11-12, 16:03
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-05, 05:04authored byDL Belavý, G Armbrecht, T Blenk, O Bock, H Börst, E Kocakaya, F Luhn, T Rantalainen, R Rawer, F Tomasius, J Willnecker, D Felsenberg
BACKGROUND: We evaluated which aspects of neuromuscular performance are associated with bone mass, density, strength and geometry. METHODS: 417 women aged 60-94years were examined. Countermovement jump, sit-to-stand test, grip strength, forearm and calf muscle cross-sectional area, areal bone mineral content and density (aBMC and aBMD) at the hip and lumbar spine via dual X-ray absorptiometry, and measures of volumetric vBMC and vBMD, bone geometry and section modulus at 4% and 66% of radius length and 4%, 38% and 66% of tibia length via peripheral quantitative computed tomography were performed. The first principal component of the neuromuscular variables was calculated to generate a summary neuromuscular variable. Percentage of total variance in bone parameters explained by the neuromuscular parameters was calculated. Step-wise regression was also performed. RESULTS: At all pQCT bone sites (radius, ulna, tibia, fibula), a greater percentage of total variance in measures of bone mass, cortical geometry and/or bone strength was explained by peak neuromuscular performance than for vBMD. Sit-to-stand performance did not relate strongly to bone parameters. No obvious differential in the explanatory power of neuromuscular performance was seen for DXA aBMC versus aBMD. In step-wise regression, bone mass, cortical morphology, and/or strength remained significant in relation to the first principal component of the neuromuscular variables. In no case was vBMD positively related to neuromuscular performance in the final step-wise regression models. CONCLUSION: Peak neuromuscular performance has a stronger relationship with leg and forearm bone mass and cortical geometry as well as proximal forearm section modulus than with vBMD.
History
Journal
Bone
Volume
83
Pagination
119-126
Location
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
ISSN
8756-3282
eISSN
1873-2763
Language
eng
Publication classification
C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal