News

Ultrasound Helps Identify Bone Defects in Women With Type 2


 

Ultrasound findings from a cross-sectional study of 162 postmenopausal women might help explain the paradox that women with type 2 diabetes can have higher bone mineral density than nondiabetic women and yet have a greater risk of fractures.

The study confirmed previous reports that bone mineral density (BMD) as measured by dual x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) is higher in women with type 2 diabetes than in women without diabetes. Yet a new diagnostic tool, quantitative ultrasound, revealed that the speed of sound through bone was lower in diabetic women. This may indicate that their denser bone is in some way of lesser quality, compared with the bone of women without type 2 diabetes.

The findings suggest that quantitative ultrasound is a useful tool in detecting impaired bone quality in postmenopausal women with type 2 diabetes, and that it might have greater promise than DXA in detecting bone defects in diabetic patients, the authors wrote.

Dr. Bei Tao of Shanghai (China) Jiao-tong University School of Medicine and colleagues enrolled 76 postmenopausal women with type 2 diabetes and 86 nondiabetic postmenopausal women. In the diabetic women, mean BMD as measured by DXA was 1.06 g/m

Quantitative ultrasound was used to assess the axial speed of sound along the distal third of the radius, the proximal phalanx of the third finger, and the midshaft of the tibia. The speed of sound was higher at all three locations in the nondiabetic women, compared with the diabetic women (see box), the investigators reported online in the Journal of Clinical Endocrine Metabolism (2008 Mar. 4 [doi:10.1210/jc.2007–1760]).

Among the nondiabetic women, BMD at each site correlated significantly with the speed of sound measurements. But among the diabetic women, only the speed of sound at the phalangeal site correlated significantly with all three BMD values; the speed of sound in the tibia correlated with none of the BMD values, and the speed of sound in the radius correlated with only the BMD of the femoral neck.

ELSEVIER GLOBAL MEDICAL NEWS

Recommended Reading

High OGTT in Pregnancy Ups Later Diabetes Risk
MDedge Family Medicine
Adjustable Gastric Banding Beats Conventional Diabetes Treatment
MDedge Family Medicine
Bone Fracture, Metformin Use Not Associated
MDedge Family Medicine
Diabetic Teens Often Underestimate Their Weight : Adolescents who did not recognize they had a weight problem were less likely to eat well and exercise.
MDedge Family Medicine
Hyperuricemia Named a Risk Factor for Type 2 Diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine
New Hypertension Drugs Not Necessarily the Best
MDedge Family Medicine
Parsing Brittle Diabetes Takes Solid Detective Work
MDedge Family Medicine
Insulin Restriction May Cut Life Span
MDedge Family Medicine
Mull the Risks And Benefits in Older Diabetics
MDedge Family Medicine
For Large Doses of Insulin, Look to U-500
MDedge Family Medicine