Osteoporosis en la mujer postmenopáusica mexicana. Magnitud del problema. Estudio multicéntrico

1999 
: Incidencia of osteoporosis induced fractures increases with age; risk increases exponentially as bone mass decreases. Women are prone to osteoporosis 2 to 3 times more than men, due to lower "peak" bone mass and the accelerated loss that occurs after the menopause. The prevalence of osteoporosis in with Caucasian postmenopausal women varies from 16 to 30% depending upon the number of sites measured (lumbar spine/hip and/or forearm). The aim of this study was to estimate the prevalence of osteopenia and osteoporosis in pre and postmenopausal Mexican women in relation to men, and to that reported in Caucasia women. The study involved 4,821 apparently healthy subjects (without known risk factors for osteoporosis), 4,467 females and 354 males from 11 different centers of Mexican Republic, 20 to 90 years old, using DXA bone densitometry of lumbar spine and hip. Prevalence of osteoporosis in women is twice that in men (P < 0.001), and it increases with age, particularly after the menopause (P < 0.0001). Our study found a prevalence of osteoporosis of the lumbar spine and/or hip in apparently healthy postmenopausal Mexican women over 50 years of age of 16%, increasing to 20% in those women with or without risk factors who attended voluntarily or by suggestion of their physician to be studied. The prevalence values obtained seem to be lower than those reported for Caucasian women, 30%. We found a prevalence of osteoporosis of 16% and of osteopenia of 57% in women 50 years of age and older. We also found a higher prevalence of osteoporosis in women of the south east part of the county.
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