COMPARISON OF RADIOGRAPHIC ABSORPTIOMETRY WITH DUAL-ENERGY X-RAY ABSORPTIOMETRY AND QUANTITATIVE COMPUTED-TOMOGRAPHY IN NORMAL OLDER WHITE AND BLACK-WOMEN

Citation
M. Kleerekoper et al., COMPARISON OF RADIOGRAPHIC ABSORPTIOMETRY WITH DUAL-ENERGY X-RAY ABSORPTIOMETRY AND QUANTITATIVE COMPUTED-TOMOGRAPHY IN NORMAL OLDER WHITE AND BLACK-WOMEN, Journal of bone and mineral research, 9(11), 1994, pp. 1745-1749
Citations number
19
Categorie Soggetti
Endocrynology & Metabolism
ISSN journal
08840431
Volume
9
Issue
11
Year of publication
1994
Pages
1745 - 1749
Database
ISI
SICI code
0884-0431(1994)9:11<1745:CORAWD>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
Bone mineral density (BMD) of the phalanges of the hand was measured b y the technique of radiographic absorptiometry (RA) in 199 older postm enopausal women previously determined to have normal BMD by dual-energ y x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) and quantitative computed tomography (QCT ). The average age of the women was 66.8 +/- 4.9 years, and they were 19.9 +/- 6.7 years postmenopause. In the 54 black women, phalangeal BM D was 11.7% greater than in the 145 white women, a difference comparab le to that found using DXA at the radial midshaft, the lumbar spine, a nd femoral neck. A correlation matrix comparing BMD measured by RA to BMD measured by DXA and QCT indicates that, in general, RA was related to the various DXA and QCT measurement sites as well as these sites w ere related to each other. When results for RA, DXA, and QCT obtained in our cohort of older women were compared to available reference data for peak adult bone mass, the average difference (SD units) from peak value was greatest for RA (-1.77 radius, -1.24 spine, -2.13 femoral n eck, -2.34 QCT spine, and -2.71 phalanges). We conclude that RA is an acceptable measure of phalangeal BMD and that the data in our cohort c an serve as reference data for older white and black women aged 55-75 years. Once the ability of RA to predict future fracture occurrence ha s been demonstrated, it could be rapidly deployed as a low-cost, widel y available bone mass measurement technique.