The Lichfield bone study: the skeletal response to exercise in healthy young men

Author:

Eleftheriou Kyriacos I.12,Rawal Jaikirty S.12,Kehoe Anthony3,James Laurence E.2,Payne John R.4,Skipworth James R.1,Puthucheary Zudin A.1,Drenos Fotios5,Pennell Dudley J.6,Loosemore Mike7,World Michael5,Humphries Steve E.8,Haddad Fares S.279,Montgomery Hugh E.16

Affiliation:

1. UCL Centre for Health and Human Performance, and

2. Department of Orthopaedics, University College London Hospitals, London;

3. Department of Emergency Medicine, Derriford Hospital, Devon;

4. Scottish National Advanced Heart Failure Service, Golden Jubilee National Hospital, West Dunbartonshire;

5. Royal Centre for Defense Medicine, Selly Oak Hospital, Birmingham; and

6. Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Unit, Royal Brompton Hospital and

7. Centre for Sports & Exercise Medicine, London;

8. Centre for Cardiovascular Genetics, BHF Laboratories, Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences, University College London, and

9. UCL Institute of Sport, Exercise and Health, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

The skeletal response to short-term exercise training remains poorly described. We thus studied the lower limb skeletal response of 723 Caucasian male army recruits to a 12-wk training regime. Femoral bone volume was assessed using magnetic resonance imaging, bone ultrastructure by quantitative ultrasound (QUS), and bone mineral density (BMD) using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) of the hip. Left hip BMD increased with training (mean ± SD: 0.85 ± 3.24, 2.93 ± 4.85, and 1.89 ± 2.85% for femoral neck, Ward's area, and total hip, respectively; all P < 0.001). Left calcaneal broadband ultrasound attenuation rose 3.57 ± 0.5% ( P < 0.001), and left and right femoral cortical volume by 1.09 ± 4.05 and 0.71 ± 4.05%, respectively ( P = 0.0001 and 0.003), largely through the rise in periosteal volume (0.78 ± 3.14 and 0.59 ± 2.58% for right and left, respectively, P < 0.001) with endosteal volumes unchanged. Before training, DXA and QUS measures were independent of limb dominance. However, the dominant femur had higher periosteal (25,991.49 vs. 2,5572 mm3, P < 0.001), endosteal (6,063.33 vs. 5,983.12 mm3, P = 0.001), and cortical volumes (19,928 vs. 19,589.56 mm3, P = 0.001). Changes in DXA, QUS, and magnetic resonance imaging measures were independent of limb dominance. We show, for the first time, that short-term exercise training in young men is associated not only with a rise in human femoral BMD, but also in femoral bone volume, the latter largely through a periosteal response.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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