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Elaine M. Dennison

Researcher at University of Southampton

Publications -  491
Citations -  32596

Elaine M. Dennison is an academic researcher from University of Southampton. The author has contributed to research in topics: Osteoporosis & Population. The author has an hindex of 79, co-authored 452 publications receiving 26725 citations. Previous affiliations of Elaine M. Dennison include Southampton General Hospital & Victoria University, Australia.

Papers
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Journal Article

Osteoporosis therapies in 2014.

TL;DR: In this review, the existing treatment options and promising new therapies for the prevention and treatment of osteoporosis are summarized.
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Exposure to heavy physical occupational activities during working life and bone mineral density at the hip at retirement age

TL;DR: It is suggested that, if sedentary work conveys an increased risk of hip fracture, it is unlikely that the mechanism is through reductions in BMD at the hip and may relate to other physical effects, such as falls risk.
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The association between social isolation and musculoskeletal health in older community-dwelling adults: findings from the Hertfordshire Cohort Study

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the impact of social isolation on bone mineral density (BMD) and physical capability in community-dwelling older adults and found that social isolation at baseline was associated with poor physical capability scores at follow-up.
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Adiposity and bone microarchitecture in the GLOW study.

TL;DR: Obesity was associated with more favourable bone microarchitecture parameters but not after parameters were normalised for body weight, and FMI residuals were associated with bone size and trabecular architecture at the radius and tibia, and tibial cortical microarch Architecture.
Journal Article

Evidence of sexual dimorphism in relationships between estrogen receptor polymorphisms and bone mass: the Hertfordshire study.

TL;DR: Relationships between the ERbeta gene and the determination of bone mass among men and women in their seventh decade are found and gender*ERbeta interaction terms were statistically significant.