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- Ahmad AlShomar, Waleed Al Abdulmonem, Qazi Shoeb Ahmad, Mariam S Alharbi, Resheed Alkhiari, Essam M Hamad, and Zafar Rasheed.
- From the Department of Medicine (AlShomar, Alharbi, Alkhiari), College of Medicine; from the Department of Pathology (Al Abdulmonem, Rasheed), College of Medicine; from the Department of Statistics (Ahmad), Deanship of Educational Services; Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition (Hamad), College of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, Qassim University, Buraidah; and from Dr. Sulaiman Al Habib Medical Group (AlShomar, Alkhiari), Qassim, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
- Saudi Med J. 2023 Jul 1; 44 (7): 711716711-716.
ObjectivesTo understand the impact of diabetes on bone mineral density and whether it increases the likelihood of osteoporosis.MethodsThis study was performed on 327 Saudis (aged >40 years) who were screened for osteoporosis and diabetes mellitus (DM). The levels of osteoporosis were determined by an estimation of Bone mineral density (BMD) using a DEXA scan examination. The data on BMD from diabetic subjects were compared with healthy nondiabetic controls.ResultsOut of 327 enrolled subjects, 38 (11.6%) were found to be osteoporotic, whereas 138 (42.2%) had DM. The data showed that the number of patients with osteoporosis in the DM group was 14 (36.8%), significantly lower than in nondiabetic patients, 21 (55.2%) (p=0.0015). Notably, the data showed no significant difference in the mean BMD of the femur in patients with DM (0.926 g/cm2) and non-diabetes (0.936 g/cm2) (p=0.280; T-score p=0.4746). The mean BMD levels in the spine of the DM study group (1.049 g/cm2) were significantly higher when compared with nondiabetic healthy controls (0.990 g/cm2) (p=0.0031).ConclusionPatients with diabetes had higher lumbar BMD than nondiabetics, although femoral BMD was similar. Patients with diabetes have a lower osteoporosis risk than nondiabetics.Copyright: © Saudi Medical Journal.
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