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  • Electronic Resource  (2)
  • Femur  (1)
  • Key words:Osteoporosis classification – Postmenopausal women – Skeletal sites –T-score  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Calcified tissue international 35 (1983), S. 135-144 
    ISSN: 1432-0827
    Keywords: Total body calcium ; Neutron activation analysis ; Femur ; Radius ; Ulna ; Densitometry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Physics
    Notes: Summary In a heterogeneous group of 12 male and 30 female patients, total body calcium (TBCa) was measured by neutron activation analysis, and bone mineral content of the distal femur and six regions of the distal radius and ulna were measured by photon absorptiometry. TBCa was an average of 71 g (9%) lower than normal in the females and 119 g (11%) lower than normal in the males. Of the forearm measurements, those of the radial shaft provided the best estimate of TBCa with a standard error of estimation (SEE) of 88 g (14% of the mean value) for female patients alone, and 113 g (16%) for the whole group. The measurement on the femur provided a better estimate with SEE 80 g (13%) for female patients and 90 g (13%) for the whole group. These SEE are comparable with the variability in TBCa between normal subjects, which has a coefficient of variation of the order of 20% in both sexes. A slightly better estimate of TBCa can be obtained by using a multiple regression equation involving both the femur and radial shaft measurements with a SEE of 74 g (12%) for female patients and 81 g (11%) for the whole group. The correlation between the estimated deficit of TBCa and the estimated deficit of bone mineral from the forearm and the femur has been calculated.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1433-2965
    Keywords: Key words:Osteoporosis classification – Postmenopausal women – Skeletal sites –T-score
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract: In this study we report first the concordance and variation in diagnostic osteoporosis classification using multiple skeletal site measurements compared with the lumbar spine only; and secondly, at the lumbar spine, the variation and diagnostic osteoporosis reclassification using the lowest individual vertebra T-score compared with the L1–L4 mean T-score. One hundred and fifty early postmenopausal women were evaluated as part of the recruitment for a multicenter osteoporosis prevention study. Bone mineral density (BMD) was restricted such that no more than 10% of the subjects had a lumbar spine BMD below 0.8 g/cm2. Forty-seven per cent of the subjects were classified as having low bone mass (T-score ≤−1.0) at the lumbar spine, 63% at the mid-forearm, 39% at the distal forearm and 50% at the hip (p〈0.05). The greatest proportion of subjects were categorized as osteoporotic at the lumbar spine, followed by the forearm and then the hip. Correlation between sites ranged from 0.57 to 0.60 (p〈0.01). Eighty-one percent of the subjects had a significant difference between their highest and lowest individual lumbar vertebra T-score (defined as a difference outside the 90% confidence interval coefficient of variation T-score value). Using the lowest individual lumbar T-score, recategorized 33% of the subjects classified as osteopenic (based on the mean L1–L4 T-score) as osteoporotic, and 23% of those classified as normal as osteopenic (p〈0.05). Of all four vertebrae, L2 had the highest T-score in 37.7% of the subjects (mean −0.3) and L4 the lowest in 61% (mean −1.5) (mean difference 1.2 units, 95% CI 0.7 to 1.7). The classification of osteoporosis varies according to skeletal site, with pronounced differences in the early menopausal population. T-scores are useful for characterizing subjects with the highest risk of osteoporosis but BMD and fracture risk must be recognized in a continuum. Individual T-scores of the lumbar vertebrae show wide variation in the absence of degenerative spinal disease or vertebral collapse and the use of the lowest, significantly different, individual lumbar vertebra T-score reclassified over half of the subjects in this study. This poses a great therapeutic dilemma in clinical practice, particularly if these fractures are at higher risk of future collapse.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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