| Literature DB >> 24501665 |
Eun-Joo Choi1, Kyae-Hyung Kim1, Young-Jin Koh1, Jee-Sun Lee1, Dong-Ryul Lee2, Sang Min Park1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although Asian people are known to have lower bone mass than that of Caucasians, little is known about coffee-associated bone health in Asian. This study aimed to assess the relationship between coffee consumption and bone mineral density (BMD) in Korean premenopausal women.Entities:
Keywords: Asian Continental Ancestry Group; Bone Density; Coffee; Premenopause
Year: 2014 PMID: 24501665 PMCID: PMC3912261 DOI: 10.4082/kjfm.2014.35.1.11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Fam Med ISSN: 2005-6443
Characteristics of the participants according to coffee consumption (n* = 1,761)
Values are presented as % (standard error). All data are weighted to the residential population of Korea.
METs: metabolic equivalent.
*Unweighted sample size. †Group I: <1 cup/d (n = 599), group II: 1 cup/d (n = 497), group III: 2 cups/d (n = 411), group IV: 3 cups/d (n = 254). ‡High-risk drinking is defined as consuming more than 3 standard drinks (=30 g of pure alcohol) per occasion on average. §Physical activity per week was divided into 3 tertiles (<12.0 METs/wk, 12-43.5 METs/wk, and >43.5 METs/wk). ∥Dietary calcium intake was divided into 3 tertiles (<231 mg/d, 231-422 mg/d, and >422 mg/d). ¶Dietary supplements include kinds of vitamins, minerals and health functional foods. **Impaired bone health included osteopenia and osteoporosis.
Relationship between coffee consumption and impaired bone health (lumbar spine or femoral neck T-score < -1.0, or taking anti-osteoporotic medications) according to site
All data are weighted to the residential population of Korea.
SE: standard error, OR: odds ratio, CI: confidence interval, METs: metabolic equivalent.
*Univariate adjusted ORs for age. †Multivariate adjusted ORs for age, body mass index, smoking status, alcohol consumption, physical activity, dietary calcium intake, education level, and monthly income. ‡P for trend from logistic regression analysis.