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Just Being Naturally Thin May Raise Risk of
Osteoporosis in Women
Newswise — Young women who are
constitutionally thin, or naturally severely
thin, may have impaired bone quality and be
at increased risk for osteoporosis,
according to a new study accepted for
publication in the Journal of Clinical
Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM).
Constitutional thinness refers to young
women with no identified eating disorder who
have a low body mass index (<16.5 kg/m˛) yet
continue to have a close-to-normal fat mass
percentage, normal physiological menstrual
cycles, and normal energy metabolism.
“Constitutional thinness is such a rare
entity that subjects are frequently
misdiagnosed as anorexics and socially
stigmatized,” said Bruno Estour, M.D., of
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de
Saint-Etienne (CHU) in Saint Etienne,
France.
“Research has been severely limited
in this area. Until now, low bone density
related to low body weight in young women
has been described only in patients with
anorexia nervosa.”
This study followed 25 constitutionally thin
and 44 anorexic young women ages 18 to 30.
Femoral neck and lumbar spine bone mineral
density were measured by dual energy X-ray
absorptiometry (DXA) while distal radius and
distal tibia were evaluated by
three-dimensional peripheral quantitative
computed tomography. Fat and lean body mass
were determined using the same DXA device.
“Almost fifty percent of anorexic patients
present with a decreased bone mass and a
very increased fracture risk, explained by
the multiple hormonal and nutritional
abnormalities,” said Estour. “In
constitutionally thin young women we found
an unexpected similar percentage of low bone
mass difficult to explain in a context of
hormonal, energetic, and bone turnover
normality.”
Osteoporosis is mostly found in women
following menopause. However, young women
have an equivalent degree of osteoporosis
when their bone mineral density (BMD) falls
within a certain range. Researchers used a
manufacturer-supplied reference dataset of
healthy young adult female BMD values and
identified a Z-score (a score expressed in
standard deviation units from a given mean
of age-matched controls) < -2.0 as an
equivalent of osteoporosis. In this study 44
percent of constitutionally thin subjects
presented with a Z-score < -2.0.
Estour and his colleagues hypothesize that
mechanisms related to genetics and/or
insufficient load on key weight-bearing bone
regions may be responsible for impaired bone
quality in constitutionally thin young
women.
Other researchers involved in this study
include Bogdan Galusca, Natacha Germain,
Cecile Bossu, Delphine Frere, and Francois
Lang from CHU Saint Etienne in France, and
Mohamed Zouch, Maire-Helene Lafage-Proust,
Thierry Thomas, and Laurence Vico from
Institut National de la Santé et de la
Recherche Médicale (Inserm) also in Saint
Etienne, France.
A rapid release version of this paper has
been published on-line and will appear in
the January issue of JCEM, a publication of
The Endocrine Society.
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