Literature DB >> 2511220

Age and menopause-related changes in indices of bone turnover.

P J Kelly1, N A Pocock, P N Sambrook, J A Eisman.   

Abstract

Age-related bone loss has been attributed to a decline in bone formation due to decreased osteoblast function. However, studies examining the relationship between age or menopausal status and indices of bone formation such as serum osteocalcin have yielded conflicting results. To examine these relationships we studied indices of bone formation and resorption and bone mineral density in 247 normal women, including 96 postmenopausal women ranging in age from 20-75 yr. A cubic polynomial regression best fit the relationship between age and serum osteocalcin (r = 0.32; n = 228; P = 0.0001) and urinary hydroxyproline/creatinine excretion (r = 0.40; n = 228; P = 0.0001), with both indices declining before the menopause, rising at the menopause, and subsequently falling through the seventh and eighth decades. While a significant decline in osteocalcin levels was observed in the postmenopausal group older than 60 yr, levels in subjects older than 60 yr remained higher (+31%) than those in late premenopausal subjects. Urinary calcium to creatinine excretion rose in the premenopausal years, increased markedly after the menopause, and remained at this level subsequently. Urinary hydroxyproline/creatinine, but not serum osteocalcin or urinary calcium/creatinine excretion, was a significant predictor of bone mineral density at the lumbar spine and the femoral neck independent of age. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that age-related bone loss after the menopause occurs in the presence of initially increased but subsequently decreasing bone turnover with maintenance of a relative excess of bone resorption.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2511220     DOI: 10.1210/jcem-69-6-1160

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab        ISSN: 0021-972X            Impact factor:   5.958


  27 in total

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2.  Temporal relationship between bone loss and increased bone turnover: a longitudinal study following natural menopause.

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7.  The effects of walking at the anaerobic threshold level on vertebral bone loss in postmenopausal women.

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8.  Reference database of biochemical markers of bone turnover for the Japanese female population. Japanese Population-based Osteoporosis (JPOS) Study.

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9.  Endogenous hormones and bone turnover markers in pre- and perimenopausal women: SWAN.

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10.  Contribution of trans-acting factor alleles to normal physiological variability: vitamin D receptor gene polymorphism and circulating osteocalcin.

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