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Body mass index, percent body fat, and bone mass in a cohort of Chinese twins aged 6 to 18 years
Authors:Lester M Arguelles  Xiaobin Wang  Binyan Wang  Hakan Demirtas  Jianhua Yang  Zhiping Li  Liuliu Wang  Xue Liu  Genfu Tang  Houxun Xing  Xiping Xu
Institution:(1) Center for Population Genetics, University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health, Room 922, 1603 West Taylor, Chicago, IL 60612, USA;(2) Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health, Room 922, 1603 West Taylor, Chicago, IL 60612, USA;(3) The Mary Ann and J. Milburn Smith Child Health Research Program, Children’s Memorial Hospital and Children’s Memorial Research Center, Chicago, IL, USA;(4) Center for Population Genetics, University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health, 1603 West Taylor, Chicago, IL 60612, USA;(5) Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health, 1603 West Taylor, Chicago, IL 60612, USA;(6) Institute for Biomedicine, Anhui Medical University, Hefei, China
Abstract:Introduction This report examines the relationship of body mass index (BMI), percent body fat (%BF), and bone mass in a cohort of male and female twins recruited from Anhui province, China, ages 6–18 years—577 male pairs (mean age = 11.4) and 478 female pairs (mean age = 11.6). Methods Whole body bone mineral content (WBMC) in (g), whole body bone area (WBA) in (cm2), and %BF were measured using DEXA (Lunar Prodigy, USA). Regression analysis of within-pair differences was used to assess the strength of the association, and the analysis was stratified by gender and age group, where age cut-offs were based on ages at spermarche or menarche estimated from large population based studies in China. Males were stratified at ages before 14 and age 14–18, and females at ages prior to 12 and age 12–18. Results Univariately, BMI and %BF were associated with WBMC and WBA in the younger males and females, and in older males; %BF was significant only in older females. Multivariate models included both BMI and %BF. Among the younger males, age < 14, BMI and %BF were significantly associated with WBMC and WBA. In the younger females, age < 12, %BF was only significant to WBA. In the older age group, only BMI was significant to WBMC and WBA in females, but in males, BMI was positively associated, and %BF was negatively associated with both bone measures. Discussion These findings show that association between BMI and %BF and bone mass differ across gender and developmental stages, and %BF appears to be beneficial at younger ages, but detrimental or non-beneficial at older ages of development.
Keywords:Twins  Bone mineral content  Bone area  BMI  Fat mass
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