The purpose of this study was to obtain baseline data on nutritional management by comparison nutritional status and life
style in postmenopausal women. This was to ultimately find out what is predictable factor of osteoporosis developed with
postmenopausal women. It is expected that the analytic research outcomes will be instrumental for developing pre-management
programs to prevent osteoporosis. The research subjects are grouped into 35 of the normal group, 39 of the group with
osteopenia and 20 of the group with osteoporosis according to T-SCORE. The research results indicate that the amounts of
alcohol and periods of menarche have the direct effect on bone density. The amounts of calcium consumed a day for people
with osteopenia and osteoporosis do not meet KDRI. It can be concluded that people with osteoporosis consume calcium
significantly less compared with the normal group (p<0.05), the consumption amounts of calcium exert the effect on osteoporosis.
For the rate of the consumption of energy of three major nutrients, the group with osteoporosis accounts for 72:11:17, where
the rate of carbohydrate (72%) is higher than that of protein (11%). Also the consumption amounts of soybean food show that
bean paste and black bean are consumed in order of the normal group > the group with osteopenia > the group with osteoporosis. The outcome reveals that the contents Blood LDL-C shows the significant difference (p<0.01)and this mean that the
contents of LDL-C influence osteoporosis. As for the consumption amounts of calcium supplements used in our daily lives, the
group with osteoporosis and the normal group account for 0.9±0.4 mg and 4.3±2.9 mg, respectively in turn, which makes the
significant difference(p,0.01. These results indicate that nutritional status and life style may be very influential factors on bone
mineral density in postmenopausal women.