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. 2023 Aug 9;18:588. doi: 10.1186/s13018-023-04034-7

Table 2.

The association between lumbar BMD and Sarcopenia

Model1 [OR (95% CI)] Model2 [OR (95% CI)] Model3 [OR (95% CI)]
Lumbar BMD 0.02(0.01,0.03) 0.06(0.03,0.11) 0.07(0.02,0.19)
Lumbar BMD (continuous)
 Q1 Reference Reference Reference
 Q2 0.58(0.47,0.71) 0.67(0.55,0.83) 0.79(0.57,1.09)
 Q3 0.35(0.28,0.44) 0.47(0.37,0.59) 0.39(0.26,0.59)
 Q4 0.24(0.19,0.31) 0.36(0.28,0.48) 0.42(0.28,0.64)
P for trend  < 0.0001  < 0.0001  < 0.0001
Stratified by gender
 Male 0.04(0.02,0.08) 0.09(0.04,0.21) 0.14(0.03,0.53)
 Female 0.01(0.00,0.02) 0.04(0.01,0.10) 0.04(0.01,0.21)
Stratified by BMI
 < 25 0.01(0.00,0.05) 0.03(0.00,0.29) 0.31(0.01,8.07)
 25–29.9 0.01(0.00,0.02) 0.02(0.01,0.08) 0.01(0.00,0.07)
 ≥ 30 0.03(0.02,0.07) 0.09(0.04,0.20) 0.11(0.03,0.40)
Stratified by age
 < 30 0.01(0.00,0.03) 0.01(0.00,0.08) 0.02(0.00,0.52)
 30–40 0.01(0.00,0.05) 0.02(0.01,0.12) 0.01(0.00,0.16)
 40–50 0.01(0.00,0.05) 0.03(0.01,0.12) 0.03(0.00,0.26)
 ≥ 50 0.01(0.04,0.24) 0.20(0.08,0.50) 0.21(0.05,0.98)

Model 1: no covariates were adjusted

Model 2: age, sex, and race were adjusted

Model 3: age, sex, race, education level, marital status, smoking status, alcohol status, diabetes status, hypertension status, creatinine, serum uric acid, glycohemoglobin, fasting glucose, HDL-C, total cholesterol, triglycerides, LDL-C, PIR, and albumin were adjusted. 95% CI, 95% confidence interval; OR, odds ratio; Q, quartile; BMI, body mass index

In the subgroup analysis stratified by gender, BMI, and race, the model is not adjusted for sex, BMI, and race, respectively