Caffarelli Carla, Alessi Chiara, Nuti Ranuccio, Gonnelli Stefano
Department of Medicine, Surgery and Neuroscience, University of Siena, Siena, Italy.
Clin Interv Aging. 2014 Sep 24;9:1629-36. doi: 10.2147/CIA.S64625. eCollection 2014.
Obesity was commonly thought to be advantageous for maintaining healthy bones due to the higher bone mineral density observed in overweight individuals. However, several recent studies have challenged the widespread belief that obesity is protective against fracture and have suggested that obesity is a risk factor for certain fractures. The effect of obesity on fracture risk is site-dependent, the risk being increased for some fractures (humerus, ankle, upper arm) and decreased for others (hip, pelvis, wrist). Moreover, the relationship between obesity and fracture may also vary by sex, age, and ethnicity. Risk factors for fracture in obese individuals appear to be similar to those in nonobese populations, although patterns of falling are particularly important in the obese. Research is needed to determine if and how visceral fat and metabolic complications of obesity (type 2 diabetes mellitus, insulin resistance, chronic inflammation, etc) are causally associated with bone status and fragility fracture risk. Vitamin D deficiency and hypogonadism may also influence fracture risk in obese individuals. Fracture algorithms such as FRAX(®) might be expected to underestimate fracture probability. Studies specifically designed to evaluate the antifracture efficacy of different drugs in obese patients are not available; however, literature data may suggest that in obese patients higher doses of the bisphosphonates might be required in order to maintain efficacy against nonvertebral fractures. Therefore, the search for better methods for the identification of fragility fracture risk in the growing population of adult and elderly subjects with obesity might be considered a clinical priority which could improve the prevention of fracture in obese individuals.
由于超重个体的骨矿物质密度较高,肥胖通常被认为有利于维持骨骼健康。然而,最近的几项研究对肥胖可预防骨折这一普遍观点提出了挑战,并表明肥胖是某些骨折的危险因素。肥胖对骨折风险的影响因部位而异,一些骨折(肱骨、脚踝、上臂)的风险增加,而另一些骨折(髋部、骨盆、腕部)的风险降低。此外,肥胖与骨折之间的关系也可能因性别、年龄和种族而异。肥胖个体骨折的危险因素似乎与非肥胖人群相似,尽管跌倒模式在肥胖人群中尤为重要。需要开展研究以确定肥胖的内脏脂肪和代谢并发症(2型糖尿病、胰岛素抵抗、慢性炎症等)是否以及如何与骨骼状态和脆性骨折风险存在因果关系。维生素D缺乏和性腺功能减退也可能影响肥胖个体的骨折风险。诸如FRAX(®)之类的骨折算法可能会低估骨折概率。目前尚无专门设计用于评估不同药物对肥胖患者抗骨折疗效的研究;然而,文献数据可能表明,在肥胖患者中可能需要更高剂量的双膦酸盐才能维持对非椎体骨折的疗效。因此,寻找更好的方法来识别日益增多的肥胖成年和老年人群中的脆性骨折风险,可能被视为一项临床优先事项,这有助于改善肥胖个体骨折的预防。