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Table 3 Relationships of sex hormones and bone turnover with GNRI and abdominal obesity in logistic or linear regression

From: Centenarian longevity had inverse relationships with nutritional status and abdominal obesity and positive relationships with sex hormones and bone turnover in the oldest females

Characteristics

GNRI

Abdominal obesity

β coefficient (95% CI)

R2

P-value

Exp(B) (95% CI)

R2

P-value

Sex hormones

 LH (mIU/mL)

− 0.001 (− 0.002 to 0.001)

0.199

< 0.001

0.985 (0.974–0.996)

0.024

0.008

 FSH (IU/L)

0.000 (− 0.001 to 0.000)

0.186

0.004

0.990 (0.985–0.996)

0.034

0.001

 Testosterone (nmol/L)

− 0.005 (− 0.016 to 0.005)

0.178

0.338

1.095 (0.879–1.364)

0.012

0.418

 Prolactin (μg/L)

0.000 (− 0.001 to 0.000)

0.177

0.792

1.008 (0.997–1.018)

0.014

0.158

 Progesterone (nmol/L)

− 0.016 (− 0.029 to 0.002)

0.182

0.022

1.082 (0.819–1.430)

0.011

0.580

 Estradiol (pmol/L)

− 0.001 (− 0.001 to 0.000)

0.205

< 0.001

1.000 (0.994–1.006)

0.010

0.951

Bone turnover

 Osteocalcin (ng/mL)

− 0.001 (− 0.001 to 0.000)

0.187

0.003

0.987 (0.977–0.997)

0.023

0.014

 β-crossLaps (ng/mL)

− 0.100 (− 0.130 to 0.071)

0.223

< 0.001

0.338 (0.166–0.689)

0.028

0.003

 PTH (pg/mL)

0.000 (− 0.001 to 0.000)

0.188

0.001

0.999 (0.992–1.005)

0.011

0.723

 25(OH)D (ng/mL)

0.000 (− 0.001 to 0.001)

0.177

0.411

0.979 (0.960–0.999)

0.018

0.044

  1. GNRI geriatric nutritional risk index, OR odds ratio, CI confidential interval, LH luteinizing hormone, FSH follicle-stimulating hormone, PTH parathyroid hormone, 25(OH)D 25-hydroxyvitamin-D3