IUPS/APS Newsroom March 29-April 6
San Diego Convention Center
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Telephone: 619.525.6228
Contact: Donna Krupa
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(301) 634-7209 (office, outside IUPS dates)
Paradox Among “Mandela’s
Children”: Why Do Black South Africans Have A Low Hip Fracture Rate
Despite Low Calcium Intake, Exercise Rates?
Does
osteoporosis propensity start in pre-teen years?
San Diego (April 3, 2005) –After Nelson Mandela was
released from prison February 11, 1990, all children born in the great
Johannesburg area were enrolled in a 20-year longitudinal study. Officially
known as “Birth to Twenty,” the study and its 3,273 youth, are colloquially
referred to as “Mandela’s Children.” It’s the largest and longest running
study of child and adolescent health and development in Africa, and one of
the few large-scale longitudinal studies in the world.
One of the main aims of the study is to follow bone
health in growing children, specifically the differences in bone mass
acquisition between black and white children and the factors that influence
this.
Besides its obvious importance in adult health and
possibly measuring the change from “third world” population to “developed
world” population, there is a situation in South Africa that’s very
counterintuitive, and possibly unique: “Black South African adults have
among the lowest hip fracture rates in the world,” according to the study’s
lead author, Joanne A. McVeigh.
“Yet our study found that, as children, blacks have
significantly lower physical activity levels and calcium intakes than age-
and gender-matched white children,” McVeigh adds. McVeigh is presenting the
research at the 35th Congress of the International Union of Physiological
Sciences in San Diego, March 31 - April 5, 2005.
*Paper presentation: “Physical activity and
bone mass accumulation patterns differ in black and white South African
children,” by Joanne A. McVeigh, Shane A. Norris and John M. Pettifor, MRC
Mineral Metabolism Research Unit, Department of Paediatrics, and School of
Physiology, University of Witwatersrand Medical School, Johannesburg.
12:30 p.m.-3 p.m. Sunday April 3, Physiology session/abstract: 347.8; board
#A64. On view 7:30 a.m. - 4 p.m.
9- and 10-year-olds compared for exercise level,
bone mineral content
Since it’s accepted that physical activity has an
osteogenic effect on bone mass, the relationship between physical activity,
or exercise, and bone mineral contect (BMC) levels in black and white South
African children was compared across the ages of 9 and 10 – halfway through
the 20-year study.
White children’s mean exercise scores didn’t differ
between ages 9 and 10, however black children’s level significantly
increased – by about 50%. “We expected that an increased exercise level
would be associated with greater BMC, especially at the hip,” McVeigh said.
“However, both group’s BMC gains over that year were similar at the hip.”
Indeed, over the same year, white kids showed a
significantly greater change in height, whole body and spine BMC.
Significant positive correlations between exercise and BMC accumulation were
found for white children at the whole body, hip and spine, but not for black
children.
“Nevertheless, after controlling for body weight and
bone area, black children remained with the advantage of a significantly
greater hip BMC both at ages 9 and 10,” McVeigh reported. This, despite the
fact the researchers found that overall white children are much more
physically active and have significantly higher calcium intakes than black
children.
“However, when we compared bone mass within different
quartiles of activity, we found that the most active white children did
indeed have better bone mass than the most active black children, but black
children have a lower and narrower range of physical activity. Physical
activity appears to be the most important modifiable factor influencing
white children’s bone health,” she noted.
Paradox indicates need for re-thinking osteoporosis
development
“The results of our study raise an apparent paradox,
which has implications on our thinking about osteoporosis, the roots of
which may well lie in the childhood years. It’s obvious that intervention is
becoming increasingly important during the growing years as this is the
period when physical activity and nutrition have the most impact. It is
possible that with the black South African population starting to adopt more
‘Western’ lifestyles, we may see an increase in fracture rates as their
genetic advantage is outweighed by lifestyle influences. It will be
important to follow up on these children and our study will continue to do
this, throughout their pubertal years and until they turn 20. Only time will
tell if these trends will persist.”
Funding: Research was funded by the Medical
Research Council (South Africa) and the Wellcome Trust (U.K.).
***
The 35th Congress of the International Union of
Physiological Sciences is in San Diego, March 31 - April 5, 2005. The
Congress (http://www.iups2005.org/)
is organized by the six member societies of the U.S. National Committee of
the IUPS,
the American Physiological Society,
the Society for Neuroscience,
the Microcirculatory Society,
the Society of General Physiologists,
the Biomedical Engineering Society, and
the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, under the auspices
of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.
The IUPS conference, held every four years, runs
concurrently this year with Experimental Biology 2005 at the San Diego
Convention Center.
The American Physiological Society (APS), which is
hosting IUPS, was founded in 1887 to foster basic and applied science, much
of it relating to human health. The Bethesda, MD-based Society has more than
10,000 members and publishes nearly 4,000 articles every year in its 14
peer-reviewed journals. In May, APS received the Presidential Award
for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring (PAESMEM).
***
Editor’s Note: For further information or to
schedule an interview with a member of the research team, please contact
Donna Krupa at the IUPS/APS newsroom @ 619.525.6228 (March 31-April
6), or (703) 967-2751 (cell) or (301) 634-7209 (office), or Stacy Brooks at
240.432.9697 (cell) or 301.634.7253 (office).
A searchable online program for IUPS and EB is at
http://www.faseb.org/meetings/eb2005/call/default.htm