Literature DB >> 19526303

The relationship between body composition and the urinary excretion of deoxypyridinoline and galactosyl-hydroxylysine in children and adolescents.

Oliver Fricke1, Christof Land, Ralf Beccard, Oliver Semler, Angelika Stabrey, Eckhard Schoenau.   

Abstract

The study intends to investigate the relationship of body composition (%fat, percent body fat; FM, fat mass; FFM, fat free mass; FA and MA cross-sectional fat and muscle area) to the urinary excretion of deoxypyridinoline (DPD) and galactosyl-hydroxylysine (Gal-Hyl). 231 healthy children and adolescents (age 5-19 years; 112 males) of the DONALD study were analyzed for FM and FFM by measuring 4 skinfold thicknesses, for DPD and Gal-Hyl in urine samples and for bone parameters, FA and MA at the forearm by peripheral quantitative computed tomography. In contrast to adrenarchal females, adrenarchal males with low %fat had low levels of DPD and Gal-Hyl. %fat was correlated with DPD in pre-adrenarchal males (r = 0.290) and females (r = 0.298). Cortical bone mineral density (BMDcort) was correlated with DPD (r = -0.351) in adrenarchal males. Controlled for BMDcort, FM was correlated with DPD in pre-adrenarchal males (r = 0.348), and FA was correlated with DPD in pre-adrenarchal females (r = 0.294). FFM was negatively correlated with Gal-Hyl in adrenarchal males (r = -0.436) and females (r = -0.338). Less than 40% of variance of excreted DPD and Gal-Hyl was explained by regression models based on parameters of body composition. The effect of body composition explains the minor part of variance of the urinary excretion of DPD and Gal-Hyl. The association of body composition to excreted DPD and Gal-Hyl was not explained by the effect of adipose tissue on bone formation and bone resorption.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19526303     DOI: 10.1007/s00774-009-0083-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bone Miner Metab        ISSN: 0914-8779            Impact factor:   2.626


  30 in total

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7.  The assessment of the body fat percentage by skinfold thickness measurements in childhood and young adolescence.

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8.  Urinary excretion of hydroxy-pyridinium cross-links of collagen reflects skeletal growth velocity in normal children.

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