www.rmpd.org.uk

You are here: Home > Abstracts > Bone Density > Differences in bone mineral density and geometry

Differences in bone mineral density and geometry

In 1947 Sir James Spence initiated the Newcastle Thousand Families study, which recruited all 1142 children born in the city between May and June that year. At the age of 50 years, 832 survivors were traced and invited to attend for measurement of bone mineral density (BMD) by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). The aim was to compare BMD measurements of men and women in this cohort, before and after adjustment for skeletal size. The femoral neck shaft angles (NSA) were also measured manually from the DXA scan printouts. A total of 171 men and 218 women agreed to participate. As expected men had greater bone mineral content and bone area at all sites (p<0.0001) and were taller and heavier (p<0.0001) than women. Men also had significantly higher BMD than women at all regions (p<0.0002), except at the femoral neck or lumbar spine. After correction for skeletal size and body weight, men had statistically significantly lower volumetric BMD at all sites.

The measurement of NSA had good intra/interobserver errors and precision (coefficient of variations 0.79%, 1.2% and 1.2%). Men had significantly larger NSAs (mean 130°, range 121-138°) than women (mean 128°, range 119-137°). We conclude that there are gender differences in BMD, skeletal size and geometry in middle aged men and women, which together with the subsequent rate of bone loss, may influence fracture risk in later life.

Publication

Tuck SP, Pearce MS, Rawlings DJ, Birrell FN, Parker L, Francis RM. Differences in bone mineral density and geometry in men and women: the Newcastle Thousand Families Study at 50 years old. Br J Radiol 2005; 78: 493-498.

Contact

Mr. David J. Rawlings, NGH Unit, Newcastle upon Tyne. Tel: +44 (0)191-233-6161.

Top of page

W3C XHTML 1.0 logo
W3C CSS logo
Triple-A conformance icon, W3C-WAI Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0
Internet Content Rating Association logo

Regional Medical Physics Department, Newcastle General Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE4 6BE, UK.
Tel: +44 (0)191-233-6161 Fax: +44 (0)191-226-0970 E-mail: webmaster@rmpd.org.uk Web: http://www.rmpd.org.uk
By using this site you agree to our Terms and Conditions of Use. Please read our legal page.
Regional Medical Physics Department, a Clinical Directorate of the Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
Copyright ©1999-2008 All Rights Reserved. Revised 28 April, 2008.

This Web Site

Accessibility | Feedback | Help | Links | Site Map | What's New |

Our Organisation

FAQs | Find Us | News & Events | Services | Work For Us |

Our Research

Abstracts | Innovation | Publications | What We Do |

Quick Site Search

Advanced search