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Association of Jumping Mechanography-Derived Indices of Muscle Function with Tibial Cortical Bone Geometry

Authors :
Charlotte Verroken
Hans-Georg Zmierczak
Jean-Marc Kaufman
Stefan Goemaere
Bruno Lapauw
Source :
CALCIFIED TISSUE INTERNATIONAL
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.

Abstract

Jumping mechanography has been developed to estimate maximum voluntary muscle forces. This study assessed associations of jumping mechanography-derived force and power measurements with tibial cortical bone geometry, compared to other estimates of muscle mass, size, and function. Healthy men (n = 181; 25-45 years) were recruited in a cross-sectional, population-based sibling-pair study. Muscle parameters include isokinetic peak torque of the quadriceps, DXA-derived leg lean mass, mechanography-derived peak jump force and power, and pQCT-derived mid-tibial (66 %) muscle cross-sectional area (CSA). Mid-tibial cortical bone parameters were assessed by pQCT. In age, height, and weight-adjusted analyses, jump force and power correlated positively with cortical bone area, cortical thickness, and polar strength-strain index (SSIp) (β = 0.23-0.34, p ≤ 0.001 for force; β = 0.25-0.30, p ≤ 0.007 for power) and inversely with endosteal circumference adjusted for periosteal circumference (ECPC) (β = -0.16, p

Details

ISSN :
14320827 and 0171967X
Volume :
98
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Calcified Tissue International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c3c0d076829601b587a8ce2ac2060d2b