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Effects of aerobic training on bone mineral density of postmenopausal women
Author(s) -
Martin Daniel,
Notelovitz Morris
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
journal of bone and mineral research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.882
H-Index - 241
eISSN - 1523-4681
pISSN - 0884-0431
DOI - 10.1002/jbmr.5650080805
Subject(s) - medicine , bone mineral , forearm , lumbar , vo2 max , menopause , bone density , aerobic exercise , osteoporosis , physical therapy , endocrinology , heart rate , surgery , blood pressure
A total of 76 women were enrolled and 55 naturally postmenopausal women completed a 12 month study investigating the effects of aerobic training plus calcium supplementation on lumbar (L2–4) bone mineral density (BMD) and forearm BMD. Training was conducted on treadmills at 70–85% of maximal heart rate for 30 or 45 minutes, three times per week for 12 months. Lumbar BMD was measured with dual‐photon absorptiometry and forearm BMD with single‐photon absorptiometry. Groups were similar with respect to age, weight, months since menopuase, height, maximal oxygen uptake (Vo 2max ), and lumbar and forearm BMD upon entering the study. Following training, percentage changes in Vo 2max were significantly different between the control and exercise groups but not between exercise groups. ANOVA evaluating lumbar BMD revealed a nonsignificant interaction effect and no significant changes ( p > 0.05) between groups or times. The control ( N = 19), 30 minute ( N = 20), and 45 minute ( N = 16) groups percentage lumbar BMD changes ( X ± SD) over 12 months were ‐0.61 ± 3.40, ‐0.48 ± 3.63, and 0.81 ± 4.53%, respectively. The 95% confidence limits for percentage changes in lumbar BMD for the control, 30 minute, and 45 minute groups were ‐2.25 to 1.02, ‐2.18 to 1.22, and ‐1.16 to 3.22%, respectively. Forearm BMD changes were also not significant. Improvement in lumbar BMD was weakly but positively correlated with improvements in VO 2max , r = 0.28, p < 0.05. Women ≤ 6 years of the onset of menopause had an accelerated lumbar BMD loss compared to subjects who were >6 years postmenopausal, and this subset's BMD changes were examined. The recently postmenopausal control subjects' ( N = 7) lumbar BMD mean percentage change was ‐3.36 ± 1.53 versus ‐1.67 ± 1.75% for the 11 recently postmenopausal exercise (30 + 45 minute groups) subjects, p < 0.05. None of the forearm BMD changes in the recently menopausal subset were significant. Thus, although 12 months of aerobic exercise training did not result in significant increases in forearm or lumbar BMD, training attenuated lumbar BMD loss in women who were ≤ 6 years of the onset of the menopause.

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