AI Article Synopsis

  • Basic combat training (BCT) leads to significant changes in the bone microarchitecture of soldiers, particularly in the tibia, and is influenced by factors like sex and race.
  • A study analyzed 1,605 trainees, measuring bone density and thickness before and after 8 weeks of BCT, finding increases across all groups but notable differences in the degree of change based on sex and race.
  • Female trainees showed greater improvements in trabecular bone metrics compared to males, while white trainees had better outcomes than black trainees in certain bone density measures.

Article Abstract

Basic combat training (BCT) is a physically rigorous period at the beginning of a soldier's career that induces bone formation in the tibia. Race and sex are determinants of bone properties in young adults but their influences on changes in bone microarchitecture during BCT are unknown. The purpose of this work was to determine the influence of sex and race on changes in bone microarchitecture during BCT. Bone microarchitecture was assessed at the distal tibia via high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography at the beginning and end of 8 weeks of BCT in a multiracial cohort of trainees (552 female, 1053 male; mean ± standard deviation [SD] age = 20.7 ± 3.7 years) of which 25.4% self-identified as black, 19.5% as race other than black or white (other races combined), and 55.1% as white. We used linear regression models to determine whether changes in bone microarchitecture due to BCT differed by race or sex, after adjusting for age, height, weight, physical activity, and tobacco use. We found that trabecular bone density (Tb.BMD), thickness (Tb.Th), and volume (Tb.BV/TV), as well as cortical BMD (Ct.BMD) and thickness (Ct.Th) increased following BCT in both sexes and across racial groups (+0.32% to +1.87%, all  < 0.01). Compared to males, females had greater increases in Tb.BMD (+1.87% versus +1.40%;  = 0.01) and Tb.Th (+0.87% versus +0.58%;  = 0.02), but smaller increases in Ct.BMD (+0.35% versus +0.61%;  < 0.01). Compared to black trainees, white trainees had greater increases in Tb.Th (+0.82% versus +0.61%;  = 0.03). Other races combined and white trainees had greater increases in Ct.BMD than black trainees (+0.56% and + 0.55% versus +0.32%; both  ≤ 0.01). Changes in distal tibial microarchitecture, consistent with adaptive bone formation, occur in trainees of all races and sexes, with modest differences by sex and race. Published 2023. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA. published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10097637PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jbm4.10719DOI Listing

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