Bone turnover assessment and monitoring are essential for chronic kidney disease (CKD)-associated bone care. Patients with CKD suffer from significantly elevated fracture risk due to abnormally high or low bone turnover, which requires diametrically opposite treatments informed by patient-specific bone turnover data. However, a reliable, accessible, non-invasive bone turnover assessment and monitoring tool remains an unmet clinical need.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT) has emerged as a powerful imaging technique for characterizing bone microarchitecture in the human peripheral skeleton. The second-generation HR-pQCT scanner provides improved spatial resolution and a shorter scan time. However, the transition from the first-generation (XCTI) to second-generation HR-pQCT scanners (XCTII) poses challenges for longitudinal studies, multi-center trials, and comparison to historical data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough second-generation high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (XCTII) provides the highest-resolution in vivo bone microstructure assessment, the manufacturer's standard image processing protocol omits fine features in both trabecular and cortical compartments. To optimize fine structure segmentation, we implemented a binarization approach based on a Laplace-Hamming (LH) segmentation and documented the reproducibility and accuracy of XCTII structure segmentation using both the standard Gaussian-based binarization and the proposed LH segmentation approach. To evaluate reproducibility, 20 volunteers (9 women, 11 men; aged 23-75 years) were recruited, and three repeat scans of the radii and tibias were acquired using the manufacturer's standard in vivo protocol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroCT-based finite element models were used to compute power law relations for uniaxial compressive yield stress versus bone volume fraction for 78 cores of human trabecular bone from five anatomic sites. The leading coefficient of the power law for calcaneus differed from those for most of the other sites ( < 0.05).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRoux-en Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery is an effective treatment for obesity; however, it may negatively impact skeletal health by increasing fracture risk. This increase may be the result not only of decreased bone mineral density but also of changes in bone microstructure, for example, increased cortical porosity. Increased tibial and radial cortical porosity of patients undergoing RYGB surgery has been observed as early as 6 months postoperatively; however, local microstructural changes and associated biological mechanisms driving this increase remain unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHumans are exposed to ionizing radiation via spaceflight or cancer radiotherapy, and exposure from radiotherapy is known to increase risk of skeletal fractures. Although irradiation can reduce trabecular bone mass, alter trabecular microarchitecture, and increase collagen cross-linking, the relative contributions of these effects to any loss of mechanical integrity remain unclear. To provide insight, while addressing both the monotonic strength and cyclic-loading fatigue life, we conducted total-body, acute, gamma-irradiation experiments on skeletally mature (17-week-old) C57BL/6J male mice ( = 84).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCortical bone microstructure deficits may increase fracture risk in individuals with cardiovascular disease and diabetes. High resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT) enables in vivo microstructure characterization but is limited in its ability to visualize important biological features. We conducted histological analyses and HR-pQCT imaging of distal tibia bone samples from 6 donors with cardiovascular disease (CVD) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough the ductility of bone tissue is a unique element of bone quality and varies with age and across the population, the extent to which and mechanisms by which typical population-variations in tissue-level ductility can alter whole-bone strength remains unclear. To provide insight, we conducted a finite element analysis parameter study of whole-vertebral (monotonic) compressive strength on six human L1 vertebrae. Each model was generated from micro-CT scans, capturing the trabecular micro-architecture in detail, and included a non-linear constitutive model for the bone tissue that allowed for plastic yielding, different strengths in tension and compression, large deformations, and, uniquely, localized damage once a specified limit in tissue-level ultimate strain was exceeded.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClinical bone sonometers applied at the calcaneus measure broadband ultrasound attenuation and speed of sound. However, the relation of ultrasound measurements to bone strength is not well-characterized. Addressing this issue, we assessed the extent to which ultrasonic measurements convey in vitro mechanical properties in 25 human calcaneal cancellous bone specimens (approximately 2×4×2cm).
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