Impact of Bone Fracture on Muscle Strength and Physical Performance-Narrative Review.
Pawel SzulcPublished in: Current osteoporosis reports (2020)
Vertebral fractures (especially multiple and severe ones) are associated with back pain, back-related disability, lower grip strength, lower strength of lower limbs, lower gait speed, and poor balance. Patients with hip fracture have slower gait and lower quadriceps strength. Non-vertebral fractures were associated with lower strength of the muscles adjacent to the fracture site (e.g., grip strength in the case of distal radius fracture, knee extensors in the case of patellar fracture) and poor physical function dependent on the muscles adjacent to the fracture site (e.g., limited range of motion of the shoulder in the case of humerus fracture, gait disturbances in the case of the ankle fracture). Individuals with a fracture experience a substantial deterioration of muscle strength and physical performance which exceeds that related to aging and is focused on the period close to the fracture occurrence. After fracture, muscle strength increased and physical performance improved. The rate of normalization depended partly on the therapeutic approach and on the rehabilitation program. A subgroup of patients, mainly the elderly, never returns to the pre-fracture level of physical performance. The permanent decline of physical function after fracture may be related to the limitation of movements due to pain, low physical activity, poor health before the fracture, and reduced efficacy of retraining after immobilization.
Keyphrases
- hip fracture
- physical activity
- healthcare
- end stage renal disease
- total knee arthroplasty
- chronic kidney disease
- bone mineral density
- randomized controlled trial
- newly diagnosed
- clinical trial
- body mass index
- peritoneal dialysis
- early onset
- spinal cord injury
- postmenopausal women
- open label
- cerebral palsy
- study protocol