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Multicenter Study
. 2003 May;14(3):198-207.
doi: 10.1007/s00198-002-1352-5. Epub 2003 Apr 11.

The effect of age, weight, and lifestyle factors on calcaneal quantitative ultrasound: the ESOPO study

Affiliations
Multicenter Study

The effect of age, weight, and lifestyle factors on calcaneal quantitative ultrasound: the ESOPO study

Silvano Adami et al. Osteoporos Int. 2003 May.

Abstract

Quantitative ultrasound (QUS) techniques have been shown to be as good as bone mineral density (BMD) assessed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), in predicting fracture risk: QUS technique could increase substantially the accessibility to a reliable bone osteoporosis risk evaluation, but little is know regarding the relationship of QUS to risk factors that have been found to predict DXA-BMD values and this is even more true in men. We studied 6,811 postmenopausal women 40 to 80 years of age and 4,981 men 60-80 years of age representative of the general population of all regions of Italy. All participants were questioned on lifestyle habits and on their medical history. After a physical examination "bone stiffness" (called here for simplicity, stiffness), which is derived from the values of broadband ultrasound attenuation (BUA) and speed of sounds (SoS) was measured by a heel QUS device (Achilles apparatus, Lunar, Madison, USA). The most common recognized determinants of bone mass (either categorical or continuous variables) were modeled with stiffness by multiple regression analysis or ANOVA. Stiffness was strongly related to age and weight. After adjusting for these variables, the women who had taken hormone replacement therapy for more than a year had significantly higher stiffness values. The difference versus nonusers remained significant for up to 20 years-since-menopause (YSM). This effect was so strong that for further analysis these women were excluded. By multivariate analysis, stiffness was then found to be significantly related to recalled body weight at 25 years of age, actual and past cigarettes smoked per day, and dairy calcium intake. Stiffness was also associated with a number of categorial factors adjusted for age, weight, and YSM: prior ovariectomy, history of more than 2 months confined to bed, outdoor physical activity, smoking, chronic use of any drug, and past corticosteroid use. All these categorial and continuous variables predicted stiffness equally in men and women. In conclusion, QUS bone measurements discriminate postmenopausal women according to past use of hormone replacement therapy. Risk factors usually associated to BMD as measured by DXA are also associated to calcaneal bone stiffness as measured by QUS, and most risk factors for osteoporosis usually observed in women are equally applicable to men.

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