We investigated the associations of body composition and sex hormones with quantitative ultrasound (QUS) parameters carried out at different skeletal sites. In 897 postmenopausal women (64.1 ± 6.6 years) we measured QUS at the calcaneus (stiffness) by Achilles-GE and at phalanxes (amplitude-dependent speed of sound [AD-SOS], bone transmission time [BTT], and ultrasound bone profile index [UBPI]) by Bone Profiler-IGEA. In all subjects we measured fat mass (FM), lean mass (LM), android fat, and gynoid fat by DXA. In all subjects we also assessed serum testosterone (T), estradiol (E(2)), sex-hormone binding globulin, free estrogen index (FEI), free androgen index, 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD), bone alkaline phosphatase (B-ALP), and type I collagen β carboxy telopeptide. Both E(2) and FEI showed weak but significant correlations with stiffness and QUS parameters at phalanxes. No significant relationships were found between T and QUS. BMI and LM were positively correlated with stiffness (r = 0.14 and r = 0.17, respectively), whereas BMI and FM showed negative correlations with AD-SOS, BTT, and UBPI. 25OHD showed positive relationships with stiffness and QUS at phalanxes. In multivariate models LM and age were associated with stiffness whereas E(2) and age were significant predictors of BTT. AD-SOS was negatively associated with FM, B-ALP, and age but positively with E(2) and 25OHD. In postmenopausal women QUS parameters at the calcaneus and at phalanxes are significantly, but diversely, associated with body composition, sex hormones, 25OHD, and bone turnover markers.
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