Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9104819 | Bone | 2005 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
We conclude that BMD alone cannot be validly used to discriminate between the risk of upper limb fractures across populations without taking account of population-specific variations in fall risk and other factors. These variations might reflect shared environmental or possibly genetic factors that contribute quite substantially to the risk of upper limb fractures in women.
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Authors
S. Kaptoge, L.I. Benevolenskaya, A.K. Bhalla, J.B. Cannata, S. Boonen, J.A. Falch, D. Felsenberg, J.D. Finn, R. Nuti, K. Hoszowski, R. Lorenc, T. Miazgowski, I. Jajic, G. Lyritis, P. Masaryk, M. Naves-Diaz, G. Poor, D.M. Reid, J. Reeve,