An enhanced walking program significantly increases participation rates and daily step counts, which were associated with weight loss and reductions in body mass index.
Photon absorption measurements of forearm bone density in 196 insulin-dependent patients, age 6--26 years, were compared with findings in 124 controls. Expected density, gm. Ca/cm.2 bone width (M/W), was calculated from regressions of M/W on ulnar length for white and black male and female controls. There were no significant correlations between M/W differences from expected and serum Ca, Mg, P, or alkaline phosphatase levels, estimated physical activity level, insulin dosage, or the presence of joint contracture. White females averaged 8.2 per cent (+/- 1 S.E.M.) loss of M/W, as against white male average loss of 4.7 per cent +/- 1 and black female loss of 2 per cent +/- 2 (p less than 0.001); the black male population was too small for separate analysis. M/W loss greater than 10 per cent was seen in 29 per cent of white males, 19 per cent of blacks, and 48 per cent of white females (p less than 0.02). When the groups were further divided into those with duration of diabetes less than or equal to five years and those with duration greater than five years, significant reduction in M/W average loss over time was seen with white females (10.6 per cent +/- 1.2 to 3.7 per cent+/- 1.5, p less than 0.0001). Expression of this defect in bone mineralization is controlled by race and sex acting independently of each other.
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