Volume 44, Issue 7 p. 756-762

Impact of a 12-Month Exercise Program on the Physical and Psychological Health of Osteopenic Women

Gina Bravo PhD

Corresponding Author

Gina Bravo PhD

Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Canada

Centre de Recherche en Gerontologie et Geriatrie, Hopital d'Youville, 1036 Rue Belvedere Sud, Sherbrooke, Quebec J1H 4C4, Canada.Search for more papers by this author
Pierre Gauthier PhD

Pierre Gauthier PhD

Faculty of Physical Education, University of Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Canada

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Pierre-Michel Roy MD

Pierre-Michel Roy MD

Department of Family Medicine, University of Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Canada

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Hélène Payette PhD

Hélène Payette PhD

Department of Nursing, University of Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Canada

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Philippe Gaulin MSc

Philippe Gaulin MSc

Geriatrics Research Centre, Youville Hospital, Sherbrooke, Canada

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Monique Harvey BSc

Monique Harvey BSc

Geriatrics Research Centre, Youville Hospital, Sherbrooke, Canada

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Lucie Péloquin MSc

Lucie Péloquin MSc

Geriatrics Research Centre, Youville Hospital, Sherbrooke, Canada

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Marie-France Dubois MSc

Marie-France Dubois MSc

Geriatrics Research Centre, Youville Hospital, Sherbrooke, Canada

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First published: July 1996
Citations: 131

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the effect of a supervised physical activity program on the physical and psychological health of osteopenic women.

DESIGN: A randomized controlled trial.

SETTING: Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada.

PARTICIPANTS: A total of 124 community-living postmenopausal women, between 50 and 70 years of age, with low bone mass took part in the study.

INTERVENTION: Subjects allocated to the experimental group performed weight-bearing exercises (walking, stepping up and down from benches), aerobic dancing, and flexibility exercises for 60 minutes, three times a week, over a period of 12 months. All subjects were invited to attend bi-monthly educational seminars covering topics related to osteoporosis.

OUTCOME MEASURES: Spinal and femoral bone mineral density (BMD), functional fitness (flexibility, coordination, agility, strength/endurance, cardiorespiratory endurance), psychological well-being, back pain intensity, and self-perceived health.

RESULTS: Spinal BMD stabilized in the exercisers while decreasing significantly in the controls (P = .031). No change in femoral BMD was observed in either group (P = .597). Four of the five parameters chosen to evaluate functional fitness, namely flexibility, agility, strength, and endurance, were affected positively by the exercise program (all P < .01). Adjusting for prescores by means of an analysis of covariance revealed a significant difference between the groups in psychological well-being, which favored the exercisers (P = .012). After 12 months, back pain reported by exercisers was lower than that reported by controls (P = .008). Finally, self-perceived health increased in the exercise group, whereas no difference was observed in the control group (P = .790).

CONCLUSION: These results suggest that after 12 months, exercising can produce a significant increase above initial levels in the functional fitness, well-being, and self-perceived health of osteopenic women. Intensity of back pain can also be lowered by exercise. The exercise program succeeded in stabilizing spinal BMD but had no effect on femoral BMD.