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Duckham 2013 Bone geometry and menstrual function in athletes final.pdf (114.2 kB)

Bone geometry according to menstrual function in female endurance athletes

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posted on 2014-08-14, 10:30 authored by Rachel Duckham, Christine A. Bailey, Noel Cameron, Katherine Brooke-WavellKatherine Brooke-Wavell, Nicholas Peirce, Gregory D. Summers
Athletes have higher bone mineral density (BMD) relative to nonathletes. In amenorrheic athletes BMD may be compromised by estrogen deficiency, but it is unknown whether this is accompanied by structural differences. We compared femoral neck bone geometry and density of a-/oligomenorrheic athletes (AAs), eumenorrheic athletes (EAs), and eumenorrheic controls (ECs). We recruited 156 women: (68 endurance athletes and 88 controls). Femoral neck BMD, section modulus (Z), and width were measured using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. Menstrual function was assessed by questionnaire and classified as EA(C10 periods/year) or AA(B9periods/year): 24 athletes were AA and 44 EA. Femoral neck BMD was significantly higher in EA than AA (8 %, difference) and EC (11 % difference): mean [SE] 1.118 [0.015], 1.023 [0.020] and 0.999 [0.014] g cm-2, respectively; p\0.001. Z was significantly higher in EA than EC (11 % difference): EA 667 [19], AA 625 [21], and EC 592 [10] cm3; p\0.001. Femoral neck width did not differ between groups. All differences persisted after adjustment for height, age, and body mass. The higher femoral neck Z and BMD in athletes, despite similar width, may indicate that exercise-related bone gains are endosteal rather than periosteal. Athletes with amenorrhea had smaller increments in bone mass rather than structural adaptation. The maintained femoral neck width in controls may be an adaptive mechanism to conserve bone strength in bending despite inactivity-related bone decrement.

History

School

  • Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences

Published in

Calcified Tissue International

Volume

92

Issue

5

Pages

444 - 450

Citation

DUCKHAM, R.L. ... et al., 2013. Bone geometry according to menstrual function in female endurance athletes. Calcified Tissue International, 92(5), pp.444-450.

Publisher

© Springer

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Publication date

2013

Notes

The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00223-013-9700-3

ISSN

0171-967X

eISSN

1432-0827

Language

  • en

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