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The evidence that exercise during growth or adulthood reduces the risk of fragility fractures is weak

journal contribution
posted on 2001-07-01, 00:00 authored by M Karlsson, Shona Bass, E Seeman
There has never been, and will never be, a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial demonstrating that exercise in youth, adulthood or old age reduces fragility or osteoporosis-related fractures in old age. The next level of evidence, a randomized, controlled but unblinded study with fractures as an end-point is feasible but has never been done. The basis for the belief that exercise reduces fractures is derived from lower levels of ‘evidence’, namely, retrospective and prospective observation cohort studies and case–control studies. These studies are at best hypothesis generating, never hypothesis testing. They are all subject to many systematic biases and should be interpreted with extreme scepticism. Surrogate measures of anti-fracture efficacy are the next level of evidence, such as the demonstration of a reduction in risk factors for falls, a reduction in falls, a reduction in fractures due to falls, an increase in peak bone size and mass, prevention of bone loss in midlife and restoration of bone mass and structure in old age.

History

Journal

Bailliere`s best Practice & Reseach in Clinical Rheumatology

Volume

15

Issue

3

Pagination

429 - 450

Publisher

Bailliere Tindall

Location

London, England

ISSN

1521-6942

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2001, Harcourt Publishers Ltd.

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