Publication | Open Access
Genetic Factors in Determining Bone Mass
585
Citations
17
References
1973
Year
Bone DiseaseBody CompositionOrthopaedic SurgeryGeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyOsteogenesisBone MassBiostatisticsPhoton Absorption TechniqueBone HomeostasisBone WidthPublic HealthBone DensityMedicineMandibular GrowthOsteoporosisBone Metabolism
The study aimed to assess whether genetic factors influence bone mass, potentially contributing to osteoporosis risk. Bone mass and width were measured by photon absorption on the right radius of 71 juvenile and 80 adult twin pairs. Greater intrapair variance in dizygotic twins and increasing differences with age indicate that bone mass is significantly influenced by genetics, with genetic‑environmental interactions also contributing.
This investigation was undertaken to evaluate possible genetic determinants of bone mass with the premise that inheritance of bone mass could be of etiologic importance in osteoporosis. Bone mass and width measurements were made with the photon absorption technique on the right radius of 71 juvenile and 80 adult twin paris. The variance of intrapair differences of bone mass in monozygotic (MZ) juvenile twins was 0.0013 g(2)/cm(2) compared to 0.0052 g(2)/cm(2) in the dizygotic (DZ) twins. For the adult twins the variance of intrapair differences in bone mass was 0.0069 for MZ and 0.0137 for DZ twins. Similar results were obtained for bone width. The significantly larger variation in intrapair differences in DZ twins indicates that these traits have significant genetic determinants. These intrapair differences were found to increase with age, suggesting that genetic-environmental interaction also contributes to the observed variation in bone mass. These data provide evidence that bone mass does have significant genetic factors, which alone or in conjunction with environmental factors may predispose persons to the development of osteoporosis.
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