Osteosarcopenia: Prevalence and 10-Year Fracture and Mortality Risk – A Longitudinal, Population-Based Study of 75-Year-Old Women

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Abstract

Osteosarcopenia is the coexistence of low bone mass and sarcopenia. In older women, its prevalence is not well described, and it is unknown if sarcopenia is additive to low bone mass for fracture and mortality risk. The study investigated prevalence of osteosarcopenia and if osteosarcopenia is associated with higher fracture and mortality risk than low bone mass alone in older community-dwelling women. The longitudinal, population-based OPRA Cohort (n = 1044), all aged 75 at inclusion, followed for 10 years. Using WHO and EWGSOP2 definitions for low bone mass (T-score

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Paulin, T. K., Malmgren, L., McGuigan, F. E., & Akesson, K. E. (2024). Osteosarcopenia: Prevalence and 10-Year Fracture and Mortality Risk – A Longitudinal, Population-Based Study of 75-Year-Old Women. Calcified Tissue International, 114(4), 315–325. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00223-023-01181-1

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