Osteoporosis is a major public health problem with low bone mass affecting nearly half the women aged 50 years or older. Evidence from various studies has shown that higher body mass index (BMI) is a protective factor for bone mineral density (BMD). Most of the evidence, however, is from studies with Caucasian women and it is unclear to what extent ethnicity plays a role in modifying the effect of BMI on BMD.A cross sectional study was performed in which records of postmenopausal women who presented for screening for osteoporosis at 2 urban medical centres were reviewed. Using logistic regression, we examined the interaction of race and BMI after adjusting for age, family history of osteoporosis, maternal fracture, smoking, and sedentary lifestyle on BMD. Low BMD was defined as T-score at the lumbar spine < -1.Among 3,206 patients identified, the mean age of the study population was 58.3 ± 0.24 (Years ± SEM) and the BMI was 30.6 kg/m 2 . 2,417 (75.4%) were African Americans (AA), 441(13.6%) were Whites and 348 (10.9%) were Hispanics. The AA women had lower odds of having low BMD compared to Whites [Odds ratio (OR) = 0.079 (0.03-0.24) (95% CI), p < 0.01]. The odds ratio of low BMD was not statistically significant between White and Hispanic women. We examined the interaction between race and BMD. For White women; as the BMI increases by unity, the odds of low BMD decreases [OR = 0.9 (0.87-0.94), p < 0.01; for every unit increase in BMI]. AA women had slightly but significantly higher odds of low BMD compared to Whites [OR 1.015 (1.007-1.14), There is thus a race-dependent effect of BMI on BMD. With each unit increase in BMI, BMD increases for White women, while a slight but significant decrease in BMD occurs in African American women.
Aim of this work was to asses whether a novel 99mTc labeled Bombesin (BN) can play a clinical role in diagnosis and staging of prostate cancer. 14 patients were studied with trans-rectal ultrasonography-guided biopsy, CT and MRI and with 99mTc BN Scintigraphy. Five patients were also imaged by 111In Octreotide (O) scan. All the patients but one were submitted to surgery and final diagnosis was reached by pathology, taken as the gold standard method. Two patients showed benign adenoma and 12 patients showed cancer at biopsy. 99mTc BN SPECT was positive in all 12 patients with cancer. Four of these patients also showed pelvic focal uptake, referred to inguinal lymph-nodal involvement. MRI and CT provided similar findings in only three cases. Pathologic evaluation after operation confirmed the invasion of nodes in all four subjects. Both 99mTc BN and 111In O scans provided normal findings in the two subjects affected by benign adenoma, while 111In O was positive in only two of three patients with cancer and was always unable to detect nodal invasion. These preliminary data suggest that 99mTc BN SPECT scan could be useful to detect primary prostate cancer and to reveal loco-regional node involvement.
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