Correlations between dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA)-assessed bone mineral content and lean mass (BMC-LM curves), and between BMC/LM ratio and age ([BMC/LM]-age curves), were analyzed in the whole body (WB), the upper limbs (ULs) and the lower limbs (LLs) of 3,063 healthy Hispanic adults. Groups of 472 men aged 25-87 years, 1,035 premenopausal (pre-MP) women aged 27-54 years, and 1,556 post-menopausal (post-MP) women aged 48-93 years were studied with a GE-Lunar DPX-Plus device. BMC-LM curves confirmed previous observations that BMC and LM masses always correlate linearly, with similar slopes within each region, but differing in intercepts according to gender and hormonal status. Multiple regression tests showed little or no independent interaction of body weight or height with those relationships. [BMC/LM]-age curves were flat in men but showed the positive influence of estrogens throughout the age range in women. Z-scored graphs of all the corresponding relationships were compiled, showing the confidence intervals for means +/-1, +/-2, and +/-3 SDs of the data (+/-1, +/-2, +/-3 z-scores) along BMC-LM and [BMC/LM]-age curves. These charts are proposed as references for assessing how well bone mass (as assessed by BMC) and muscle mass (assumed proportional to LM) follow the natural anthropometric/biomechanical proportionality in Hispanic men and women within the age range studied, employing similar devices. Charts for LLs, showing the lowest variance amongst the studied correlations and approaching the origin as an exclusive feature, could provide the most accurate reference curves. Differences between data from ULs and LLs may provide information about any eventual interaction of body-weight bearing with the general results. The proposed analysis may provide useful information for approaching a differential diagnosis between disuse-related and other types of osteopenias employing only DXA.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00198-005-2007-0 | DOI Listing |
J Bone Miner Metab
July 2019
Unidad Académica en Investigación Epidemiológica, Centro de Investigación en Políticas, Población y Salud, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City, Mexico.
The present study aims: (1) to explore the influence of lean mass (LM) on bone mineral content (BMC), (2) to investigate the pubertal influences on the BMC-LM relation, and (3) to perform Z-score charts of BMC-LM relation, stratified by gender and reproductive status categorized by age ranges. A cross-sectional analysis was conducted using 4001 healthy subjects between 7 and 90 years participating in the Health Workers Cohort Study. Of these, 720 participants were ≤ 19 years, 2417 were women ≥ 20 years, and 864 were men ≥ 20 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOsteoporos Int
December 2005
Universidad Metropolitana de Barranquilla and Osteolab, Barranquilla, Colombia.
Correlations between dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA)-assessed bone mineral content and lean mass (BMC-LM curves), and between BMC/LM ratio and age ([BMC/LM]-age curves), were analyzed in the whole body (WB), the upper limbs (ULs) and the lower limbs (LLs) of 3,063 healthy Hispanic adults. Groups of 472 men aged 25-87 years, 1,035 premenopausal (pre-MP) women aged 27-54 years, and 1,556 post-menopausal (post-MP) women aged 48-93 years were studied with a GE-Lunar DPX-Plus device. BMC-LM curves confirmed previous observations that BMC and LM masses always correlate linearly, with similar slopes within each region, but differing in intercepts according to gender and hormonal status.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBone
July 2004
Centro de Estudios de Metabolismo Fosfocálcico, Universidad Nacional de Rosario, Argentina.
A whole-body DXA study of 1450 healthy Caucasian individuals [Bone 22 (1998) 683] found that mineral mass, either crude (BMC) or statistically adjusted to fat mass (FM-adjusted BMC), correlated linearly with lean mass (LM, proportional to muscle mass). The results showed similar slopes but decreasing intercepts (ordinate values) in the order: pre-MP women > men > post-MP women > children. This supports the hypothesis that sex hormones influence the control of bone status by muscle strength in all species.
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