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Trimethylamine N-oxide and hip fracture and bone mineral density in older adults: The cardiovascular health study

Authors :
Rachel E. Elam
Petra Bůžková
Joshua I. Barzilay
Zeneng Wang
Ina Nemet
Matthew J. Budoff
Jane A. Cauley
Howard A. Fink
Yujin Lee
John A. Robbins
Meng Wang
Stanley L. Hazen
Dariush Mozaffarian
Laura D. Carbone
Source :
Bone. 161
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Gut microbiota-derived metabolite trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) may adversely affect bone by inducing oxidative stress. Whether this translates into increased fracture risk in older adults is uncertain.Determine the associations of plasma TMAO with hip fracture and bone mineral density (BMD) in older adults.Cox hazard models and linear regression stratified by sex examined the associations of TMAO with hip fracture and BMD in the longitudinal cohort of the Cardiovascular Health Study.5019 U.S. adults aged ≥65 years.Plasma TMAO.Incident hip fractures; total hip BMD dual x-ray absorptiometry in a subset (n = 1400).Six hundred sixty-six incident hip fractures occurred during up to 26 years of follow-up (67,574 person-years). After multivariable adjustment, TMAO was not significantly associated with hip fracture (women: hazard ratio (HR) [95% confidence interval (CI)] of 1.00[0.92,1.09] per TMAO doubling; men: 1.12[0.95,1.33]). TMAO was also not associated with total hip BMD (women: BMD difference [95% CI] of 0.42 g/cmAmong older US men and women, TMAO was not significantly associated with risk of hip fracture or BMD overall. Exploratory analyses suggested a significant association between higher TMAO and hip fracture when BMI was elevated, which merits further study.

Details

ISSN :
18732763
Volume :
161
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bone
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....df1f84f97f7adaed212f3be989afb384