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The diagnosis of osteoporosis in men is controversial, although most studies demonstrate similar fracture rates for men and women with the same level of hip bone mineral density (BMD). Whether this applies to the lumbar spine is currently uncertain and has important implications with respect to choice of reference population for T-score calculation and osteoporosis diagnosis. This question was specifically addressed in the population-based Canadian Multicentre Osteoporosis Study cohort of 4745 women and 1887 men ages 50+ yr at the time of baseline lumbar spine dual energy x-ray absorptiometry. In up to 10 yr of observation, incident clinical major osteoporotic fractures occurred in 110 men (5.8%) vs 543 women (11.4%) (p < 0.001). Mean lumbar spine BMD in men was greater than in women, both among those with and those without incident major osteoporotic fracture (p 

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Choice of lumbar spine bone density reference database for fracture prediction in men and women: a population-based analysis.

William D Leslie et al., 2014

William D Leslie, Lisa Langsetmo, Wei Zhou, David Goltzman, Christopher S Kovacs, Jerilynn Prior, Robert Josse, Wojciech P Olszynski, K Shawn Davison, Tassos Anastassiades, Tanveer Towheed, David A Hanley, Stephanie M Kaiser, Brian Lentle, Nancy Kreiger

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