Menopause Resource Center
Exercise
Builds Bone Mass in Postmenopausal Women Whether
or Not They Use Hormone Therapy
article syndicated from NIAMS
November
2003
Aerobic,
weight-bearing and resistance exercise improves bone
mineral density (BMD) in postmenopausal
women whether or not they use hormone therapy, according
to results from the Bone, Estrogen and Strength (BEST)
study funded by the National Institute of Arthritis
and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS), a part
of the Department of Health and Human Services' National
Institutes of Health.
Scott
Going, Ph.D., Timothy Lohman, Ph.D., Linda Houtkooper,
Ph.D., and their colleagues at the
University of Arizona conducted a randomized clinical
trial in 320 postmenopausal women between the ages
of 45 and 65 to test the effect of a specific exercise
regimen on bone mineral density. The women who were
randomized to the exercise regimen-a combination of
weight-bearing and resistance exercises-showed significant
improvement (1 to 2 percent) in BMD after one year
at the hip and spine, two important sites of fractures
that may result from the bone-wasting disease osteoporosis.
Notably, this benefit was found in both women taking
postmenopausal hormone therapy and those who did not,
although the women taking hormones had a somewhat greater
response to exercise.
The
exercises involved 20-25 minutes of resistance training
using back extensions, leg presses,
squats, pulldowns, dumbbell presses, and rowing, and
7-10 minutes of cardiovascular weight-bearing activity,
such as skipping, jogging, and jumping rope.
The
study shows that specific strength training and resistance
exercises can retard and even
reverse bone loss in healthy postmenopausal women,
and that estrogen replacement is not necessary to gain
the benefit of the exercise. All women received calcium
supplements, and adequate calcium may be a factor in
optimizing the effect of exercise on bone in postmenopausal
women. The finding may provide reassurance for women
who no longer take hormone replacement therapy because
of the recent Women's Health Initiative findings. Osteoporosis
is a disease characterized by low bone mass, bone fragility
and increased susceptibility to fractures of the hip,
spine and wrist. Women can lose up to 20 percent of
their bone mass in the five to seven years following
menopause, making them more susceptible to osteoporosis.
In the United States today, 10 million individuals
already have osteoporosis, and 18 million more have
low bone mass, placing them at increased risk for this
disorder.
Going
S, et al. Effects of exercise on bone mineral density
in calcium-replete postmenopausal women with
and without hormone replacement therapy. Osteoporosis
International 2003; 14:637-643.