Abstract
The decline of mineral bone density with age can lead in more extreme cases to osteopenia and osteoporosis, and is therefore one of the aspects of ageing with great medical and social significance. With this idea in mind a study of age changes in the trabecular and, separately, the cortical bone density of the radius was carried out in 1218 females and 405 males, aged 22 to 60 years, all occupationally active inhabitants of the city of Wroclaw, Poland. The technique used was the peripheral Quantitative Computed Tomography (pQCT). It was found that in females bone densities remain relatively stable throughout the period between 22 and 40 years. They then begin to decline slowly, with a rapid decline after the age of 55. A distinctly different pattern was found among males, with bone densities reaching peak values, markedly higher than those in females, in the third decade of life. After this age the bone density values begin to decline at a rapid rate, so that by the age of 60 years mean trabecular and cortical densities in males have decreased to levels almost equivalent to females of equal age. In view of the small size of the male samples, especially in the older age classes, the above results should be treated with caution and confirmed using larger samples.