84 research outputs found
Relationship between spine osteoarthritis, bone mineral density and bone turn over markers in post menopausal women
The effect of past use of oral contraceptive on bone mineral density, bone biochemical markers and muscle strength in healthy pre and post menopausal women
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>during adulthood, most studies have reported that oral contraceptive (OC) pills had neutral, or possibly beneficial effect on bone health. We proposed this study of pre and post menopausal women assessing BMD, bone biochemical markers and physical performance among OC past users and comparable women who have never use Ocs.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A cross-sectional study comparing the bone density, bone biochemical markers (osteocalcin, CTX) and three measures to assess physical performance: timed get-up-and-go test "TGUG", five-times-sit-to-stand test "5 TSTS" and 8-feet speed walk "8 FSW" of users and never users OC. We were recruited 210 women who used OC for at least 2 years with that of 200 nonusers was carried out in pre and postmenopausal women (24-86 years).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>when analysing the whole population, BMD and biochemical markers values were similar for Ocs past users and control subjects. However when analysing the subgroup of premenopausal women, there was a statistically significant difference between users and never-users in osteocalcin (15,5 ± 7 ng/ml vs 21,6 ± 9 ng/ml; p = 0,003) and CTX (0,30 ± 0,1 ng/ml vs 0,41 ± 0,2 ng/ml; p = 0,025). This difference persisted after adjustment for age, BMI, age at menarche and number of pregnancies. In contrast, in post menopausal women, there was no difference in bone biochemical markers between OC users and the control. On the other hand OC past users had a significant greater performance than did the never users group. And when analysing the physical performance tests by quartile OC duration we found a significant negative association between the three tests and the use of OC more than 10 years.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>the funding show no evidence of a significant difference in BMD between Ocs users and never user control groups, a decrease in bone turn over in OC pre menopausal users and a greater physical performances in patients who used OC up than 10 years.</p
La théorie variation des rayons complexes pour le calcul des vibrations moyennes fréquences
A new approach named the "Variational Theory of Complex Rays" is introduced for computing the vibrations of elastic structures weakly damped in the medium frequency range. Emphasis has been placed here on the most fundamental aspects. The effective quantities (elastic energy, vibration intensity ...) are evaluated after computing a small system of equations which does not derive from a finite element dicretization of the structure. Numerical examples related to plates show the interest and the possibilities ofthe VTRC
Relation between phalangeal bone mineral density and radiographic knee osteoarthritis: a cross-sectional study
L’immunogénicité des arrêts et switches fréquents des biothérapies chez les rhumatisants
SAT0129 Vitamin D Status and Its Association with Disease Activity, Severity and Physical Disability in Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients
La consommation d’antalgiques par les patients atteints de polyarthrite rhumatoïde est-elle liée à l’intensité de la douleur, à l’inflammation ou au handicap ?
SAT0128 Secondary Sjögren's Syndrome in Rheumatoid Arthritis: Characteristics and Association with Joint Damage
Impact des comorbidités sur l’initiation des biothérapies chez les patients atteints de polyarthrite rhumatoïde
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