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Spinal cord injury (SCI) leads to severe bone loss in the paralysed limbs and to increased fracture risk.Since long bone fractures can lead to comorbidities and a reduction in quality of life, it is important to improve bone strength in people with chronic SCI.
In this prospective longitudinal cohort study, the authors investigated whether functional electrical stimulation (FES) induced high-volume cycle training can partially reverse the loss of bone substance in the legs after chronic complete SCI.
The authors conclude that high-volume FES-induced
cycle training has clinical relevance as it can partially reverse bone
loss and thus may reduce fracture risk at this fracture prone site.
Eleven participants with motor-sensory complete SCI (mean age
41.9+/-7.5 years; 11.0+/-7.1 years post injury) were recruited. After
an initial phase of 14+/-7 weeks of FES muscle conditioning,
participants performed on average 3.7+/-0.6 FES-cycling sessions per
week, of 58+/-5 min each, over 12 months at each individual's highest
power output.
Bone and muscle parameters were investigated in the legs
by means of peripheral quantitative computed tomography before the
muscle conditioning (t1), and after six (t2) and 12 months (t3) of
high-volume FES-cycle training.
After 12 months of FES-cycling,
trabecular and total bone mineral density (BMD) as well as total
cross-sectional area in the distal femoral epiphysis increased
significantly by 14.4+/-21.1%, 7.0+/-10.8% and 1.2+/-1.5%,
respectively. Bone parameters in the femoral shaft showed small but
significant decreases, with a reduction of 0.4+/-0.4% in cortical BMD,
1.8+/-3.0% in bone mineral content, and 1.5+/-2.1% in cortical
thickness.
These decreases mainly occurred between t1 and t2. No
significant changes were found in any of the measured bone parameters
in the tibia. Muscle CSA at the thigh increased significantly by
35.5+/-18.3%, while fat CSA at the shank decreased by 16.7+/-12.3%. Our
results indicate that high-volume FES-cycle training leads to
site-specific skeletal changes in the paralysed limbs, with an increase
in bone parameters at the actively loaded distal femur but not the
passively loaded tibia.
Authors:
Frotzler A, Coupaud S, Perret C, Kakebeeke TH, Hunt KJ, Donaldson Nde N, Eser P.
Swiss Paraplegic Research, CH-6207 Nottwil, Switzerland.
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Bone. 2008 Jul;43(1):169-76. Epub 2008 Mar 20. |