The Impact of Childhood Obesity on Skeletal Health and Development

Increased risk of fracture identified in obese children has led to a focus on the relationship between fat, bone, and the impact of obesity during skeletal development. Early studies have suggested that despite increased fracture risk, obese children have a higher bone mass. However, body size corre...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Paul Dimitri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Society for the Study of Obesity 2019-03-01
Series:Journal of Obesity & Metabolic Syndrome
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7570/jomes.2019.28.1.4
id doaj-abf97d0984a44d04b1ef6f7189d0a5fc
record_format Article
spelling doaj-abf97d0984a44d04b1ef6f7189d0a5fc2020-11-24T21:30:49ZengKorean Society for the Study of ObesityJournal of Obesity & Metabolic Syndrome2508-62352019-03-0128141710.7570/jomes.2019.28.1.4jomes.2019.28.1.4The Impact of Childhood Obesity on Skeletal Health and DevelopmentPaul Dimitri0Academic Unit of Child Health, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UKIncreased risk of fracture identified in obese children has led to a focus on the relationship between fat, bone, and the impact of obesity during skeletal development. Early studies have suggested that despite increased fracture risk, obese children have a higher bone mass. However, body size corrections applied to account for wide variations in size between children led to the finding that obese children have a lower total body and regional bone mass relative to their body size. Advances in skeletal imaging have shifted the focus from quantity of bone in obese children to evaluating the changes in bone microarchitecture that result in a change in bone quality and strength. The findings suggest that bone strength in the appendicular skeleton does not appropriately adapt to an increase in body size which results in a mismatch between bone strength and force from falls. Recent evidence points to differing influences of fat compartments on skeletal development—visceral fat may have a negative impact on bone which may be related to the associated adverse metabolic environment, while marrow adipose tissue may have an independent effect on trabecular bone development in obese children. The role of brown fat has received recent attention, demonstrating differences in the influence on bone mass between white and brown adipose tissues. Obesity results in a shift in growth and pubertal hormones as well as influences bone development through the altered release of adipokines. The change in the hormonal milieu provides an important insight into the skeletal changes observed in childhood obesity.https://doi.org/10.7570/jomes.2019.28.1.4BoneChildObesityFractureMarrowHormone
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul Dimitri
spellingShingle Paul Dimitri
The Impact of Childhood Obesity on Skeletal Health and Development
Journal of Obesity & Metabolic Syndrome
Bone
Child
Obesity
Fracture
Marrow
Hormone
author_facet Paul Dimitri
author_sort Paul Dimitri
title The Impact of Childhood Obesity on Skeletal Health and Development
title_short The Impact of Childhood Obesity on Skeletal Health and Development
title_full The Impact of Childhood Obesity on Skeletal Health and Development
title_fullStr The Impact of Childhood Obesity on Skeletal Health and Development
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Childhood Obesity on Skeletal Health and Development
title_sort impact of childhood obesity on skeletal health and development
publisher Korean Society for the Study of Obesity
series Journal of Obesity & Metabolic Syndrome
issn 2508-6235
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Increased risk of fracture identified in obese children has led to a focus on the relationship between fat, bone, and the impact of obesity during skeletal development. Early studies have suggested that despite increased fracture risk, obese children have a higher bone mass. However, body size corrections applied to account for wide variations in size between children led to the finding that obese children have a lower total body and regional bone mass relative to their body size. Advances in skeletal imaging have shifted the focus from quantity of bone in obese children to evaluating the changes in bone microarchitecture that result in a change in bone quality and strength. The findings suggest that bone strength in the appendicular skeleton does not appropriately adapt to an increase in body size which results in a mismatch between bone strength and force from falls. Recent evidence points to differing influences of fat compartments on skeletal development—visceral fat may have a negative impact on bone which may be related to the associated adverse metabolic environment, while marrow adipose tissue may have an independent effect on trabecular bone development in obese children. The role of brown fat has received recent attention, demonstrating differences in the influence on bone mass between white and brown adipose tissues. Obesity results in a shift in growth and pubertal hormones as well as influences bone development through the altered release of adipokines. The change in the hormonal milieu provides an important insight into the skeletal changes observed in childhood obesity.
topic Bone
Child
Obesity
Fracture
Marrow
Hormone
url https://doi.org/10.7570/jomes.2019.28.1.4
work_keys_str_mv AT pauldimitri theimpactofchildhoodobesityonskeletalhealthanddevelopment
AT pauldimitri impactofchildhoodobesityonskeletalhealthanddevelopment
_version_ 1725961514948493312