Hui SL, Dimeglio LA, Longcope C, Peacock M, McClintock R, Perkins AJ, Johnston CC. Difference in bone mass between
black and white children - attributable to body build, sex hormone levels or bone turnover?
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2003; 88(2):642-649.
A cross-sectional study of 232 healthy children, with about equal numbers of boys and girls and blacks and whites,
aged 4 to 16 yr, was conducted to investigate the racial differences in bone mineral. Bone mineral content (BMC) by
dual x-ray absorptiometry was found to be similar between blacks and whites at the spine after controlling for age and
Tanner stage. However, total body BMC was higher in blacks, compared with whites of the same age and Tanner stage. Height
and weight alone reduced the racial difference in BMC from 152 g to 66 g in girls and from 163 g to 105 g in boys, in whom
the difference was further reduced to 66 g after accounting for lean and fat body mass and subscapular skinfold. The only
significant sex hormone was androstenedione, which explained another 4–5 g of the racial difference in total body BMC for
both boys and girls. Among the biochemical variables, only 25OH vitamin D reduced the residual racial difference in total
body BMC to 39 g in girls, whereas serum PTH, urine free deoxypyridinoline ratio, and 1,25(OH)2 vitamin D reduced the residual
difference to 25 g in boys. The residual racial differences in bone mass were not statistically significant.
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