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Caffeine and Other Predictors of Bone Density among Pre- and Perimenopausal Women

Authors :
Meir J. Stampfer
Isaac Schiff
Christopher Longcope
M Hernandez-Avila
SM McKinlay
Walter C. Willett
Veronica A. Ravnikar
C C corrected to Longcope Longscope
M Francis
Source :
Epidemiology. 4:128-134
Publication Year :
1993
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 1993.

Abstract

We evaluated the influence of dietary, anthropomorphic, and hormonal factors on bone density in a cross-sectional sample of 281 pre- and perimenopausal women age 50-60 years living in Massachusetts. The sample included only women who had intact ovaries and were not currently using estrogen. Information on diet was obtained through a semiquantitative food frequency questionnaire. We measured bone density using single-photon absorptiometry in the non-dominant arm in two sites: the midshaft and the ultradistal radius. We observed no important associations between midshaft bone density and dietary variables but found linear relations between ultradistal radius bone density and body mass index [b = 1.10 gm/cm2 per kg/m2, standard error (SE) = 0.56], follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) (b = -0.36 gm/cm2 per IU/liter, SE = 0.15), and several nutrients: calcium (b = 0.012 gm/cm2 per mg/day, SE = 0.007), retinol (b = 0.002 gm/cm2 per IU/day, SE = 0.0008), vitamin C (b = 0.025 gm/cm2 per mg/day, SE = 0.013), and vitamin D (b = 0.040 gm/cm2 per IU/day, SE = 0.018). We could not clearly distinguish the independent contribution of these micronutrients, however, because many were commonly ingested together in the form of supplements. Caffeine was inversely associated with bone density (b = -0.035, SE = 0.017) independent of dietary, anthropometric, and hormonal factors. Analyses of individual caffeinated beverages revealed consistent inverse associations for coffee (b = -3.42 gm/cm2 per cups/day, SE = 1.49), tea (b = -2.85 gm/cm2 per cups/day, SE = 1.56), and caffeinated cola (b = -14.0 gm/cm2 per cans/day, SE = 5.1), but not for decaffeinated coffee or decaffeinated cola [corrected]. [ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Details

ISSN :
10443983
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Epidemiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....763203ef74b8daad3c1bc7dc90df77f3