Renata Iannetta
University of São Paulo
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Nutricion Hospitalaria | 2012
F. Giolo De Carvalho; R. Deh Souza Santos; Renata Iannetta; V. Marques Miguel Suen; A. Marliere Navarro; C. Barbosa Nonino; Júlio Sérgio Marchini; Odilon Iannetta
BACKGROUND Osteoporosis is one of the most important public health problems involving a high percentage of costs in the medical care system. Reliable diagnostic techniques for an early detection of bone deterioration and studies of factors that influence its development in menopausal women are crucial. The aim of the study was to determine the relationship between bone microarchitecture and anthropometry in climacteric women. METHODS Women were recruited at the Menopause Clinic, University Hospital of FMRP/USP, and submitted to anthropometry and to the evaluation of bone quality (Ultrasound Bone Profile Index, UBPI) and quantity (Amplitudedependent Speed of Sound, AD-SoS-) by phalangeal quantitative osteosonography (DBM Sonic BP). Descriptive analysis of the data was reported and a multiple linear regression was performed using the software SAS® 9.0. RESULTS 71 patients aged 58 ± 7 y were studied: 28% had BMI 18.5-24.9 kg/m(2), 35% BMI 24.9-29.9 and 37% BMI > 30. Mean AD-SoS was 2059 ± 79 m/s and mean UBPI was 0.67 ± 0.13. Considering AD-SoS the dependent variable, there was no statistically significant relationship between age (p = 0.20), BMI (p = 0.76), fat mass by bioelectrical impedance (p = 0.42) and by anthropometry (p = 0.95). The variables had very low effect on the UBPI when it was considered the dependent variable. CONCLUSIONS The relation between bone microarchitecture and the anthropometry of the women studied shows that, the greater the bone quantity, the better the anthropometric parameters, without statistically significance. This work was a cross-sectional study on a small sample that needs to be validated in a prospective design.
Journal of Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology | 2015
Renata Iannetta; Anderson Sanches de Melo; Odilon Iannetta; Júlio Sérgio Marchini; Francisco José Albuquerque de Paula; Carlos E. Martinelli; Ana Carolina Japur de Sá Rosa e Silva; Rui Alberto Ferriani; Wellington P. Martins; Rosana Maria Reis
STUDY OBJECTIVES To evaluate bone quantity and quality in postmenarchal adolescents treated for idiopathic central precocious puberty (CPP) in childhood with a gonadotropin-releasing hormone analog (GnRHa) and to determine the serum concentrations of bone remodeling markers. DESIGN AND PARTICIPANTS This cross-sectional study included 53 postmenarchal adolescent girls who were divided into 2 groups: 27 adolescents who were treated with GnRHa in childhood for idiopathic CPP (the CPP group) and 26 women who presented with physiological development of secondary sex traits (the control group). INTERVENTIONS None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Weight, height, body mass index, age at menarche, time since menarche, body composition, bone mineral density (BMD), bone quality, and serum insulin, glucose, osteocalcin, and carboxyl-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen concentrations were compared in the 2 groups. BMD data were analyzed by using both dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) and osteosonography, and body composition was measure with the use of DXA and electrical bioimpedance. RESULTS BMD and bone quality did not differ significantly between the CPP and control groups when analyzed by using DXA or osteosonography. Serum osteocalcin concentration was significantly lower (P = .02) in the CPP than in the control group. Insulin was higher in the CPP group, and hyperinsulinemia was an independent predictor of bone quantity and quality assessed by using osteosonography. Body mass index and percent fat were determined by using DXA, and the duration of use of GnRHa treatment and the time since GnRHa discontinuation were not independent predictors of bone quantity and quality. CONCLUSION Postmenarchal adolescents treated with GnRHa for CPP in childhood did not show a reduction in bone quantity or quality.
Medicina (Ribeirão Preto. Online) | 2012
Roberta Santos; Flávia Gd Carvalho; Tatiana P. Lima; Riana L. Viegas; Angélica Faria; Vivian Marques Miguel Suen; Anderson Marliere Navarro; Renata Iannetta; Carla Barbosa Nonino; Júlio Sérgio Marchini; Odilon Iannetta
International Journal of Nutrology | 2012
Roberta Santos; Eduarda de Castro Furtado; Flávia Giolo Deh Carvalho; Renata Iannetta; Carla Barbosa Nonino; Júlio Sérgio Marchini; Odilon Iannetta; Durval Ribas Filho; Vivian Marques Miguel Suen
Archive | 2016
Carlos Tostes Guerreiro; Renata Iannetta; José Sérgio Marchini; Durval Ribas Filho; Ricardo Barelli Feitosa; Odilon Iannetta
International Journal of Nutrology | 2016
Carlos Tostes Guerreiro; Renata Iannetta; Júlio Sérgio Marchini; Durval Ribas Filho; Ricardo Barelli Feitosa; Odilon Iannetta
Adolescencia e Saude | 2015
Renata Iannetta; Ricardo Barbelli Feitosa; Odilon Iannetta
Nutricion Hospitalaria | 2012
F. Giolo De Carvalho; R. De Souza Santos; Renata Iannetta; V. Marques Miguel Suen; A. Marliere Navarro; C.B. Nonino-Borges; Júlio Sérgio Marchini; Odilon Iannetta
Archive | 2012
Roberta Ds Santos; Flávia Gd Carvalho; Tatiana P. Lima; Riana L. Viegas; Angélica Faria; Vivian Mm Suen; Anderson Marliere Navarro; Renata Iannetta; Carla Barbosa Nonino; Júlio Sérgio Marchini; Odilon Iannetta
Medicina (Brazil) | 2012
Roberta Santos; Flávia Giolo Deh Carvalho; Tatiana P. Lima; Riana L. Viegas; Angélica Faria; Vivian Marques Miguel Suen; Anderson Marliere Navarro; Renata Iannetta; Carla Barbosa Nonino; Júlio Sérgio Marchini; Odilon Iannetta