| Literature DB >> 23525967 |
Angela M Cheung1, Jonathan D Adachi, David A Hanley, David L Kendler, K Shawn Davison, Robert Josse, Jacques P Brown, Louis-Georges Ste-Marie, Richard Kremer, Marta C Erlandson, Larry Dian, Andrew J Burghardt, Steven K Boyd.
Abstract
Bone structure is an integral determinant of bone strength. The availability of high resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT) has made it possible to measure three-dimensional bone microarchitecture and volumetric bone mineral density in vivo, with accuracy previously unachievable and with relatively low-dose radiation. Recent studies using this novel imaging tool have increased our understanding of age-related changes and sex differences in bone microarchitecture, as well as the effect of different pharmacological therapies. One advantage of this novel tool is the use of finite element analysis modelling to non-invasively estimate bone strength and predict fractures using reconstructed three-dimensional images. In this paper, we describe the strengths and limitations of HR-pQCT and review the clinical studies using this tool.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23525967 PMCID: PMC3641288 DOI: 10.1007/s11914-013-0140-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Osteoporos Rep ISSN: 1544-1873 Impact factor: 5.096
Fig. 1The number of publications each year that utilized high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography
Fig. 2a, A typical setup of HR-pQCT for patient measurements. At top, the casts used for securing the forearm and lower leg is shown. b, c, and d, The procedure for HR-pQCT analysis requires a ‘scout view’ x-ray of the radius or tibia (left) so that the operator can select the region of interest for scanning (solid green bar). Subsequently, three-dimensional data can be obtained in the scan region (right). e, A typical section from HR-pQCT showing the ultradistal tibia and fibula. The green line on the periosteal surface of the tibia is used to extract the bone of interest for subsequent three-dimensional analysis
HR-pQCT parameters with units
| Abbreviation | Description | Standard unit | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metric measures | |||
| Total volume | TV | Volume of entire region of interest | mm3 |
| Bone volume | BV | Volume of region segmented as bone | mm3 |
| Bone surface | BS | Surface area of the region segmented as bone | mm2 |
| Bone volume ratio* | BV/TV | Ratio of bone volume to total volume in region of interest | % |
| Bone surface ratio | BS/BV | Ratio of bone surface area to bone volume | % |
| Trabecular thickness* | Tb.Th | Mean thickness of trabeculae | mm |
| Trabecular thickness SD | Tb.Th.SD | Measure of homogeneity of trabecular thickness | mm |
| Trabecular separation* | Tb.Sp | Mean space between trabeculae | mm |
| Trabecular separation SD | Tb.Sp.SD | Measure of homogeneity of trabecular spacing | mm |
| Trabecular number* | Tb.N | Mean number of trabeculae per unit length | per mm |
| Cortical thickness (original)* | Ct.Th | Average cortical thickness | mm |
| Cortical porosity | Ct.Po | Cortical porosity | % |
| Bone mineral density (D100)* | BMD | Total volumetric density | mg HA/cm3 |
| Cortical bone mineral density (Dcomp)* | Ct.BMD | Cortical volumetric density | mg HA/cm3 |
| Trabecular bone mineral density (Dtrab)* | Tb.BMD | Trabecular volumetric density | mg HA/cm3 |
| Total bone area* | Tt.Ar | Cross-sectional area | mm2 |
| Non-Metric Measures | |||
| Structural model Index | SMI | Measure of trabecular structure (0 for plates and 3 for rods | |
| Degree of anisotropy | DA | 1 is isotropic, >1 is anisotropic by definition; DA = length of longest divided by shortest mean intercept length vector | |
| Connectivity density | Conn.D | Extent of trabecular connectivity normalized by TV | mm-3 |
| Cross-sectional moment of inertia | l min, 1 max | minimum and maximum moments of inertia | mm4 |
*Standard HR-pQCT measures are indicated
Heterogeneity in bone structure in population studies — changes over age and between sexes (all cross-sectional studies)
| Author year [reference] | Ages (y) | f/m | Volumetric bone density changes | Cortical compartment structural changes | Trabecular compartment structural changes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liu 2010 [ | 9–21 | 172/151 | BMD & Ct.BMD ↑ over puberty in f & m | Large ↑ in Ct.Th over puberty in f & m | Tb.Th ↑ in f & m over puberty; little change in Tb.N |
| Nishiyama 2012 [ | 9–22 | 212/186 | More mature ↑ Ct.BMD | More mature ↓ Ct.Po | m ↑ BV/TV & ↑ Ct.Ar vs f |
| Boutroy, 2005 [ | 19–88 | 256 | PM f ↓ BMD, Ct.BMD & Tb.BMD vs pre-menopausal f | PM f ↓ Ct.Th vs pre-menopausal f | PM ↓ Tb.Nb & Tb.Th vs pre-menopausal f |
| Nishiyama 2010 [ | 19–99 | 280/0 | PM f ↓ Ct.BMD vs pre-menopausal f | PM f ↑ Ct.Po; Ct.Th was similar in PMf and pre-menopausal f | N/R |
| Burghardt 2010 [ | 20–78 | 94/57 | BMD & Ct.BMD & in f & m; | m ↑ Ct.Th vs f; Co.Po increased with age in m & f, but more so in f | N/R |
| PM f ↓ To.BMD & Ct.BMD vs pre-menopausal | |||||
| Dalzell 2009 [ | 20–79 | 74/58 | Tb.BMD ↓ f vs m; BMD, Tb.BMD & Ct.BMD all ↓ with age | Ct.Th ↓ in f vs m and loss faster over age in f | m ↑ Tb.N & Tb.Th vs f; no relationship between age and change in trabecular structure |
| MacDonald, 2011 [ | 20–99 | 442/202 | BMD & Ct.BMD ↓ in f & m; decreased faster in f | Tt.Ar ↑ through adulthood; ~33 % ↑ young m vs young f | m ↑ Tb.N & Tb.Th vs f; over aging both ↓ Tb.Nb & Tb.Th |
| Khosla 2006 [ | 21–97 | 324/278 | Ct.BMD ↑ young f than m, but decreased faster in f with aging (22 vs 16 %) | Ct.Th ↓ faster in f with aging vs m (52 vs 38 %, | young m ↑ Tb.BV (26 %) & Tb.Th (28 %) vs f; Tb.Nb ↓ with age in f but not in m; Tb.Th ↓ more in men with age vs f |
| Bjornerem 2011 [ | 40–61 | 185/0 | N/R | PM f ↑ Ct.Po & ↓Ct.Ar vs premenopausal f | PM f ↓ Tb.N & BV/TV vs premenopausal f |
BMD Total BMD, BV/TV trabecular bone volume/total volume, Ct.Ar cortical bone area, Ct.BMD Cortical BMD, Ct.Th Cortical thickness, Ct.Po cortical porosity, f female, m male, N/R Not reported, PM postmenopausal, Tb.BMD trabecular BMD, Tb.Nb trabecular number, Tb.Th trabecular thickness, Tt.Ar total bone area