J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle
December 2020
Background: Muscle weakness is a key factor in the increase risk of falls and might also play a significant role in the increase of risk of hip fracture. Computed tomography-measured muscle size and muscle density are well-established imaging biomarkers used in studies of physical function, frailty or cancer, but limited to hip fracture. In particular, it is warranted to have a better understanding of the performance of muscle size and density in the discrimination of acute hip fractures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Endocrinol (Lausanne)
June 2021
Muscle weakness and bone fragility are both associated with hip fracture. In general, muscle contractions create forces to the bone, and bone strength adapts to mechanical loading through changes in bone architecture and mass. However, the relationship between impairment of muscle and bone function remain unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: We describe a semipopulation input function for evaluating bone plasma clearance from static and dynamic (18)F-fluoride PET scans.
Methods: The semipopulation input function was derived by fitting an exponential curve to venous plasma measurements obtained 30-60 min after injection and adding a population residual curve representing the bolus peak scaled for injected activity and adjusted for time of peak counts. The residual curve was found from nine postmenopausal women who had continuous arterial blood samples and venous samples taken every 10 min.