Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8722899 Journal of Clinical Densitometry 2018 29 Pages PDF
Abstract
This study aimed to investigate the associations between adiposity, muscular fitness (MF), diet, sun exposure, and physical activity profiles as surrogate measures with bone health status in a sample of schoolchildren aged 8-18 yr old. A total of 250 Egyptian schoolchildren aged 8-18 yr were randomly invited to participate in these cross-sectional survey analyses. Calcaneal broadband ultrasound attenuation (c-BUA), bone mineral density (BMD), and bone formation markers (total calcium, serum bone alkaline phosphatase, and osteocalcin) were measured as markers of bone health. Adiposity profile, MF, physical activity (PA), sun exposure, Ca, and vitamin D dietary intake as related cofactors of bone health were measured by using prevalidated questionnaires and standard analytical techniques. A total of 85% (n = 213) of the study population showed normal bone health and 14.8% (n = 37) had abnormal bone health; most of them are girls (67.6%) classified according to BMD and c-BUA Z-scores into osteopenia (9.6%) and osteoporosis (5.2%). Compared with boys, higher correlations between c-BUA, bone mineral content, and BMD measures in the femoral neck, lumbar spine, whole body, and bone markers were reported in girls with lower bone mass. There was a positive significant correlation between body mass index, adiposity, sun exposure, MF, PA status, Ca and vitamin D intake, and c-BUA and BMD score analyses. These parameters were shown to be associated with about ~57.3%-88.4% of bone health characteristics of children and adolescents with osteopenia and osteoporosis. In children and adolescents, sun exposure, Ca and vitamin D diets, adiposity, PA, and changes in the levels of Ca, osteocalcin, and serum bone alkaline phosphatase were shown to be associated with bone health. Also, a significant correlation was reported between c-BUA score, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry-BMD measures, and bone markers at clinically important bone sites of girls and boys. However, further clinical trials should be studied to consider c-BUA and bone markers as the benchmark estimates of bone mass for diagnostic purposes in young ages.
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