Skulls stay strong despite worse diets
- Clinical Research communications team
- Apr 28, 2022
- 2 min read

Southampton researchers have shown that skulls keep their strength even when other bones become weaker.
They found that while poorer quality of diet and lifestyle does impact bone health, the body prioritises keeping our skulls strong.
The study supports skulls not being included in whole-body bone scans in children as they don’t reflect wider health.
Researchers have published their findings in Bone.
Strength through density
The skull has an important role in protecting the brain from injury. Its bones contain dense mineral, which makes them hard and able to resist blows and impacts. Bones in the arms and legs contain less mineral.
Southampton researchers investigated what determines the amount of mineral in different types of bone in children. They discovered that how much milk a child drinks, the amount of muscle they have, and the quality of their diet affects bone mineral in the arms and legs. But these factors have a much smaller effect on the amount of mineral in the skull.
Southampton Women’s Survey
The study included over 1,200 children. These children have been taking part in research since before they were born.
Prof Cyrus Cooper at the MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Centre leads the Southampton Women's Survey, which aims to increase knowledge of how the skeleton develops through pregnancy and into adulthood.
The children had a body scan between the ages of six and seven years to measure the amount of mineral in their bones.
Skulls stay strong
Dr Rebecca Moon, a Clinical Lecturer and paediatrician at the University of Southampton and University Hospital Southampton, led the analysis.
She said: “These findings are important. It shows that the amount of mineral in the skull is resistant to changes in diet, weight and the amount of muscle in the body that do affect other bones.
“If a child reduces the amount of milk they eat and drink, the bones in their arms, legs and spine may become weaker. This will increase their risk of breaking a bone. But the bones in the skull will stay hard to protect the brain.”
Misleading bone scans
Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) is the gold standard for measurement of bone mineral density (BMD).
Professor Nicholas Harvey, Professor of Rheumatology and Clinical Epidemiology, and Honorary Consultant Rheumatologist, said: “Doctors use these type of bone scans to assess BMD in children at risk of poor bone health. The study results highlight that the skull should not be included in the scan as it may falsely increase the result.”
The research was supported by experts from the MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Centre, University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust, NIHR Southampton Nutrition Biomedical Research Centre, University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust, NIHR Applied Research Collaboration Wessex and the NIHR Musculoskeletal Biomedical Research Unit, University of Oxford.
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