Background Considering the aging population associated with higher osteoporotic fracture risk, high prevalence of diabetes and its effect on bone health along with lack of information on bone quality using common methods (BMD) the aim of present study was to determine the association between trabecular bone score (TBS) and diabetes in an elderly population participating in Bushehr Elderly Health (BEH) program. Materials and methods This cross-sectional study was performed on data collected during the BEH Program, stage II. Anthropometric indices were measured based on NHANES III protocol. Diabetes and pre-diabetes were defined according to ADA Guideline 2018. Bone density was measured using DXA method (DXA, Discovery WI, Hologic Inc., USA). A software installed on the same device (TBS iNsight® software) was applied to assess TBS values. Variables related to bone health were compared based on their glycemic status (participants with diabetes, participants with prediabetes, and normoglycemic) using analysis of variance. Univariate and multivariate linear and logistic regression models were used to determine the association between TBS values and bone density in different glycemic states. Results The data of 2263 participant aged 60 years and over were analyzed. Mean TBS values were significantly different between participants with diabetes, participants with prediabetes, and normoglycemic groups (P = 0.004;, however, P trend was not significant (0.400)). Mean BMD values at femoral neck and lumbar spine were significantly higher in diabetics compared with those diagnosed with pre-diabetes; the latter also had higher bone density compared with normoglycemic individuals (both P ANOVA test and P trends for means were < 0.01]. In univariate linear regression model, TBS values were negatively associated with pre-diabetes (β = −0.070; P < 0.001) but not with diabetes (β = −0.002, P = 0.915). This significant relationship disappeared when the results were adjusted for BMI. In fully adjusted multivariate logistic regression models, odds ratio linking pre-diabetes and diabetes with spinal osteoporosis was 0.861 (CI 95% 0.670-1.105) and 0.525 (CI 95% 0.392-0.701), respectively. As for femoral osteoporosis, odds ratio was 0.615 (CI 95% 0.407-0.928) and 0.968 (CI 95% 0.629-1.489), correspondingly. Moreover, for cumulative osteoporosis, the odds were 0.843 (CI 95% 0.676-1.106) and 0.551 (CI 95% 0.415-0.732), respectively.
HighlightsBrown tumor may present as uni/multilocular osteolytic lesions with bone expansion, bone pain or pathologic fracture in primary, secondary and tertiary hyperparathyroidism. Recently, such presentation is rare because of early detection before symptomatic bone lesions appear due to improved blood screening techniques.The reported case is a 65-year-old female presented with recurrent hyperparathyroidism and a tumoral mass in her jaw.Although recurrent Hypercalcemia with high serum PTH level, jaw tumor, and bilateral parathyroid adenomas in99mTc-MIBI parathyroid scintigraphy suggesting HPT-JT, her old age, lack of similar familial history, absence of nonendocrine malignancy as well as evidence of malignancy in the patient's parathyroid pathology, this diagnosis was not supported.
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