CT of the middiaphyseal femur: cortical bone mineral density and relation to porosity.

Radiology

Laboratories of Experimental Radiology and Synovial Pathology, and Orthopedic Research, Faculty of Medicine, Lariboisière-Saint-Louis, Paris, France.

Published: October 2000

Purpose: To determine whether computed tomography (CT) can be used to quantify age- and site-related changes in cortical bone mineral density (cBMD) at the middiaphyseal femur and whether cBMD differences are related to intracortical porosity.

Materials And Methods: Cortical bone specimens from 163 femurs were studied with CT and microradiography. Femurs were from 77 males and 86 females in a white anthropologic collection covering a broad age spectrum. In each sample, the cBMD was measured in the entire cortical width and in periosteal, midcortical, and endosteal subregions of interest. Age- and site-related changes in cBMD were tested for significance by using a two-way analysis of variance for both sexes. By using linear regression, cBMD was compared with porosity in the entire cortical width and in each subregion.

Results: There were significant age-related differences in cBMD (P <.001 in females, P =.008 in males). In addition, cBMD values were significantly different between the three cortical subregions (P <.001 for both sexes), decreasing from the periosteum to the midcortex to the endosteum. The cBMD values were closely related to porosity, and porosity contributed to 71.6% of the variance in cBMD in the overall population.

Conclusion: CT is effective in the measurement of age- and site-related changes in cBMD. Decreases in cBMD are closely correlated with increased cortical porosity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/radiology.217.1.r00se11179DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cortical bone
12
middiaphyseal femur
8
bone mineral
8
mineral density
8
age- site-related
8
site-related changes
8
entire cortical
8
cortical width
8
cbmd
6
cortical
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!