| Literature DB >> 31240093 |
Narendra Kumar Chaudhary1, Mukti Nath Timilsena2, Dev Ram Sunuwar3, Pranil Man Singh Pradhan4, Raj Kumar Sangroula5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bone mineral density (BMD) is the measure of the minerals, mostly calcium and phosphorous, contained in certain volume of bone to diagnose osteoporosis. The aim of the study was to find out the association of lifestyle and food consumption with BMD.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31240093 PMCID: PMC6556264 DOI: 10.1155/2019/1536394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Osteoporos ISSN: 2042-0064
Characteristics of respondents (n=169).
| Variables | Mean± S.D. |
|
| |
| Age (in years) | 63.46± 9.784 |
| Height | 152.5760±7.32034 |
| Weight | 60.0994±11.59607 |
| BMI | 25.7784±4.48414 |
| Daily calcium intake (in mg) | 520.4488±296.97648 |
| Daily dietary vitamin D intake (in IU) | 578.6688±435.53989 |
| BMD value (T-score in S.D.) | |
| LS Spine-AP | -1.6976±1.66812 |
| Right Femur-AP | -1.2284±1.38104 |
| Left Femur-AP | -1.2538±1.37720 |
|
| |
| Variables | Frequency (%) |
|
| |
|
| |
| Male | 38(22.5%) |
| Female | 131(77.5%) |
|
| |
| 50 to 59 Years | 67(39.6%) |
| 60 years and above | 102(60.4%) |
|
| |
| Underweight | 0(0%) |
| Normal | 71(42%) |
| Overweight | 98(58%) |
|
| |
| Yes | 21(12.4%) |
| No | 148(87.6%) |
|
| |
| Yes | 53(31.4%) |
| No | 116(68.6%) |
|
| |
| Yes | 149(88.2%) |
| No | 20(11.8%) |
|
| |
| Yes | 67(39.6%) |
| No | 102(60.4%) |
Dietary habit of respondents (n=169).
| Variables | Frequency (%) |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Vegetarian | 22(13%) |
| Non-vegetarian | 147(87%) |
|
| |
| Daily | 109(64.5%) |
| Once a week | 60(35.5%) |
|
| |
| Daily | 136(80.5%) |
| Once in week | 33(19.5%) |
|
| |
| Never | 22(13%) |
| Daily | 20(11.8%) |
| Once in week | 127(75.1%) |
|
| |
| <500 mg | 92(54.44%) |
| 500 to 999 mg | 71(42.01%) |
| ≥1000 mg | 6(3.55%) |
Prevalence of osteoporosis (n=169).
| Respondents | Normal | Osteopenia | Osteoporosis | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| 50 to 59 years | 23(34.3%) | 31(46.3%) | 13(19.4%) | 67(39.6%) |
| 60 years and above | 18(17.6%) | 34(33.33%) | 50(49.1%) | 102(60.4%) |
|
| ||||
| Male | 12(31.6%) | 17(44.7%) | 9(23.7%) | 38(22.5%) |
| Female | 29(22.1%) | 48(36.6%) | 54(41.2%) | 131(77.5%) |
|
| 41(24.2%) | 65(38.5%) | 63(37.3%) | 169(100%) |
Association of different variables with BMD.
| Variables | No osteoporosis | Osteoporosis | Bivariate analysis | Multivariate analysis | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| p-value | COR(95%CI) | p-value | AOR(95%CI) | |||
|
| ||||||
| Male | 29 | 9 | Ref | Ref | ||
| Female | 77 | 54 | 0.049 | 2.260(0.990-5.516) | 0.017 | 3.339(1.240-8.995) |
|
| ||||||
| 50-59 years | 54 | 13 | Ref | Ref | ||
| 60 years and above | 52 | 50 | <0.001 | 3.994(1.946-8.200) | 0.001 | 3.756 (1.745-8.085) |
|
| ||||||
| Normal | 34 | 37 | 0.001 | 3(1.6-5.7) | 0.020 | 2.339(1.141-4.795) |
| Overweight/obese | 72 | 26 | Ref | Ref | ||
|
| ||||||
| Yes | 9 | 12 | 0.04 | 2.534(1.002-6.417) | 0.026 | 3.848(1.179-12.558) |
| No | 97 | 51 | Ref | Ref | ||
|
| ||||||
| Yes | 40 | 13 | 0.021 | 0.429(0.208-0.886) | 0.143 | 0.525 (0.221-1.244) |
| No | 66 | 50 | Ref | Ref | ||
|
| ||||||
| Yes | 48 | 19 | 0.052 | 0.522(0.270-1.010) | — | — |
| No | 58 | 44 | Ref | |||
|
| ||||||
| Yes | 95 | 54 | 0.447 | 0.659(0.271-1.782) | ||
| No | 11 | 9 | Ref | — | — | |
∗ denotes significant variables, P-value < 0.05, for bivariate analysis.
∗∗ denotes significant variables, P-value < 0.05, for multivariate analysis.
COR: crude odds ratio.
AOR: adjusted odds ratio.
Ref: reference category.
Dietary association with BMD.
| Result | Frequency | Mean± SD | P-Value |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| No osteoporosis | 106 | 572.32 | 0.003 |
| Osteoporosis | 63 | 433.17 | |
|
| 574.19 | ||
| No osteoporosis | 106 | 586.19 | 0.863 |
| Osteoporosis | 63 |
∗ denotes significant variable, P-Value<0.05, for independent sample t-test.