Abstract

The mechanism of age-related cortical bone loss was investigated in 229 Japanese women, 41–94 years of age, by metacarpal bone mass measurement. While no significant correlation was found between bone width and age, a significant increase in bone marrow width, and significant decreases in cortical bone density and total bone mass were observed in association with aging (P < 0.0001). There was a significant negative correlation between total bone mass and bone marrow width (r = −0.239; P < 0.0005), and significant positive correlations between both total bone mass and cortical bone density (r = 0.539; P < 0.0001) and cortical bone width (r = 0.839; P < 0.0001). The findings suggested that age-related cortical bone loss in middle-aged and elderly women resulted from two different factors; a decrease in cortical bone density caused by progression of intracortical porosity, and a decrease in cortical bone width as a result of bone loss on the endosteal surface. The latter had a greater influence on an age-related cortical bone loss than the former.

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