AI Article Synopsis

  • This study explores the causes of sacral fragility fractures by analyzing the distribution of calcium and fat marrow in both healthy and osteoporotic pelvises.
  • Researchers used CT and MRI scans to compare the properties of bone in intact pelves and in those with unilateral fractures, categorizing the samples into healthy and osteoporotic groups.
  • Findings indicate that osteoporotic patients show significant calcium loss in specific areas of the sacrum, which contributes to fracture risks, while injured sides exhibit bone density changes related to injury mechanics.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Pathogenesis of sacral fragility fractures is not fully understood. This study investigates zonal distribution of calcium salt and fat marrow in intact bone-healthy and osteoporotic pelvis. In addition, in unilateral sacral fractures, the fracture side was compared with the intact side.

Methods: CT and MRI images of 37 pelves were analyzed. Zonal calcium salt distribution by Hounsfield units (HU) was recorded for each CT dataset. Fat marrow content was measured in MRI mDixon-Quant sequence. The cohort was divided: intact pelves with (PEO, HU < 100, n = 8) and without osteoporosis (PE, HU ≥ 100, n = 14) based on the mean HU value in LWK5. A third group consisted of patients with osteoporosis and unilateral fractures (PEOFx, n = 10).

Conclusion: The results suggest that in PEO sacral alae experience disproportionate skeletal rarefaction. This concerns the sacral ala at the S1 level (- 25 ± 55), whereby the calcium salt content is so low that it corresponds to the S3 level of healthy bone (- 20 ± 21 HU). This explains the occurrence of transalar fractures in the load-transmitting zone S1. In PEOFx, the calcium salt density was higher and the fat content was lower on the fractured side than on the intact side, indicating bony compacting due to lateral compression and fat displacement due to hematoma in the accident mechanism. This study makes an important contribution to the understanding of the development of sacral fragility fractures. Furthermore, impaction of the cancellous bone within the fracture can be demonstrated.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00068-024-02507-wDOI Listing

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