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Are patterns of bone loss in anorexic and postmenopausal women similar? Preliminary results using high resolution peripheral computed tomography

Abstract This study intended to compare bone density and architecture in three groups of women: young women with anorexia nervosa (AN), an age-matched control group of young women, and healthy late postmenopausal women. Three-dimensional peripheral quantitative high resolution computed-tomography (H...

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Published in:Bone (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2014-01, Vol.58, p.146-150
Main Authors: Milos, Gabriella, Häuselmann, Hans-Jörg, Krieg, Marc-Antoine, Rüegsegger, Peter, Gallo, Luigi M
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description Abstract This study intended to compare bone density and architecture in three groups of women: young women with anorexia nervosa (AN), an age-matched control group of young women, and healthy late postmenopausal women. Three-dimensional peripheral quantitative high resolution computed-tomography (HR-pQCT) at the ultradistal radius, a technology providing measures of cortical and trabecular bone density and microarchitecture, was performed in the three cohorts. Thirty-six women with AN aged 18–30 years (mean duration of AN: 5.8 years), 83 healthy late postmenopausal women aged 70–81 as well as 30 age-matched healthy young women were assessed. The overall cortical and trabecular bone density (D100), the absolute thickness of the cortical bone (CTh), and the absolute number of trabecules per area (TbN) were significantly lower in AN patients compared with healthy young women. The absolute number of trabecules per area (TbN) in AN and postmenopausal women was similar, but significantly lower than in healthy young women. The comparison between AN patients and post-menopausal women is of interest because the latter reach bone peak mass around the middle of the fertile age span whereas the former usually lose bone before reaching optimal bone density and structure. This study shows that bone mineral density and bone compacta thickness in AN are lower than those in controls but still higher than those in postmenopause. Bone compacta density in AN is similar as in controls. However, bone inner structure in AN is degraded to a similar extent as in postmenopause. This last finding is particularly troubling.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.bone.2013.09.016
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Thirty-six women with AN aged 18–30 years (mean duration of AN: 5.8 years), 83 healthy late postmenopausal women aged 70–81 as well as 30 age-matched healthy young women were assessed. The overall cortical and trabecular bone density (D100), the absolute thickness of the cortical bone (CTh), and the absolute number of trabecules per area (TbN) were significantly lower in AN patients compared with healthy young women. The absolute number of trabecules per area (TbN) in AN and postmenopausal women was similar, but significantly lower than in healthy young women. The comparison between AN patients and post-menopausal women is of interest because the latter reach bone peak mass around the middle of the fertile age span whereas the former usually lose bone before reaching optimal bone density and structure. This study shows that bone mineral density and bone compacta thickness in AN are lower than those in controls but still higher than those in postmenopause. 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Preliminary results using high resolution peripheral computed tomography</title><title>Bone (New York, N.Y.)</title><addtitle>Bone</addtitle><description>Abstract This study intended to compare bone density and architecture in three groups of women: young women with anorexia nervosa (AN), an age-matched control group of young women, and healthy late postmenopausal women. Three-dimensional peripheral quantitative high resolution computed-tomography (HR-pQCT) at the ultradistal radius, a technology providing measures of cortical and trabecular bone density and microarchitecture, was performed in the three cohorts. Thirty-six women with AN aged 18–30 years (mean duration of AN: 5.8 years), 83 healthy late postmenopausal women aged 70–81 as well as 30 age-matched healthy young women were assessed. 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identifier ISSN: 8756-3282
ispartof Bone (New York, N.Y.), 2014-01, Vol.58, p.146-150
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1873-2763
language eng
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source Elsevier
subjects 3D-pQCT
Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Anorexia - complications
Anorexia - diagnostic imaging
Anorexia - physiopathology
Anorexia nervosa
Biological and medical sciences
Bone loss
Bone Resorption - complications
Bone Resorption - diagnostic imaging
Bone Resorption - physiopathology
Case-Control Studies
Demography
Diseases of the osteoarticular system
Eating behavior disorders
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Medical sciences
Microarchitecture of bone
Orthopedics
Osteoporosis
Osteoporosis. Osteomalacia. Paget disease
Postmenopausal women
Postmenopause - physiology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Vertebrates: anatomy and physiology, studies on body, several organs or systems
Young Adult
title Are patterns of bone loss in anorexic and postmenopausal women similar? Preliminary results using high resolution peripheral computed tomography
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