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Correlation of obesity and osteoporosis: effect of fat mass on the determination of osteoporosis.

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TLDR
It is unclear whether fat has beneficial effects on bone, and it is anticipated that this will be an active and fruitful focus of research in the coming years.
Abstract
It was previously believed that obesity and osteoporosis were two unrelated diseases, but recent studies have shown that both diseases share several common genetic and environmental factors. Body fat mass, a component of body weight, is one of the most important indices of obesity, and a substantial body of evidence indicates that fat mass may have beneficial effects on bone. Contrasting studies, however, suggest that excessive fat mass may not protect against osteoporosis or osteoporotic fracture. Differences in experimental design, sample structure, and even the selection of covariates may account for some of these inconsistent or contradictory results. Despite the lack of a clear consensus regarding the impact of effects of fat on bone, a number of mechanistic explanations have been proposed to support the observed epidemiologic and physiologic associations between fat and bone. The common precursor stem cell that leads to the differentiation of both adipocytes and osteoblasts, as well the secretion of adipocyte-derived hormones that affect bone development, may partially explain these associations. Based on our current state of knowledge, it is unclear whether fat has beneficial effects on bone. We anticipate that this will be an active and fruitful focus of research in the coming years.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Determinants of Total Body and Regional Bone Mineral Density in Normal Postmenopausal Women—A Key Role for Fat Mass

TL;DR: It is concluded that total body fat is the most significant predictor of BMD throughout the skeleton and this relationship is not explicable in terms of either estrone production in fat tissue or the dependence of skeletal load-bearing on fat mass.
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Does obesity really make the femur stronger? BMD, geometry, and fracture incidence in the women's health initiative-observational study.

TL;DR: Femur BMD, CSA, and SM were larger in women with higher BMI, but values scaled in proportion to lean and not to fat or total body mass, supporting the view that bones adapt to prevalent muscle loads.
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Bone Metabolism in Obesity and Weight Loss

TL;DR: Future obesity and weight loss trials would benefit from assessment of key hormones, adipokine and gut peptides that regulate calcium absorption, and bone mineral density and quality by using sensitive techniques in high-risk populations.
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High-fat diet decreases cancellous bone mass but has no effect on cortical bone mass in the tibia in mice

TL;DR: It is indicated that obesity induced by a high-fat diet decreases cancellous bone mass but has no effect on cortical bone mass in the tibia in mice.
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Influence of adipokines and ghrelin on bone mineral density and fracture risk: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: Adiponectin is the most relevant adipokine negatively associated with BMD, independent of gender and menopausal status, and probably confounded by body composition, in particular fat mass parameters.
References
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Risks and benefits of estrogen plus progestin in healthy postmenopausal women: Principal results from the Women's Health Initiative randomized controlled trial

TL;DR: Overall health risks exceeded benefits from use of combined estrogen plus progestin for an average 5.2-year follow-up among healthy postmenopausal US women, and the results indicate that this regimen should not be initiated or continued for primary prevention of CHD.
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Positional cloning of the mouse obese gene and its human homologue

TL;DR: The ob gene product may function as part of a signalling pathway from adipose tissue that acts to regulate the size of the body fat depot.
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Prevalence of obesity, diabetes, and obesity-related health risk factors, 2001.

TL;DR: Overweight and obesity were significantly associated with diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, asthma, arthritis, and poor health status, and increases in obesity and diabetes continue in both sexes, all ages, all races, all educational levels, and all smoking levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adipose Tissue as an Endocrine Organ

TL;DR: An overview of the endocrine functions of adipose tissue can be found in this paper, where the authors highlight the adverse metabolic consequences of both adipose excess and deficiency, and propose a more rational therapy for these increasingly prevalent disorders.
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