Mj. Flynn et Dd. Cody, THE ASSESSMENT OF VERTEBRAL BONE MACROARCHITECTURE WITH X-RAY COMPUTED-TOMOGRAPHY, Calcified tissue international, 53, 1993, pp. 190000170-190000175
On a macroscopic scale, the structural characteristics of whole bone a
re likely dependent on the distribution of typically applied loads to
the bone surface, the full bone shape, the thickness of the cortex at
the various surface positions, and the distribution of cancellous bone
material. X-ray computed tomography is presently the best available m
ethod for assessing the macroarchitecture of bone in-vivo. Fine detail
, three-dimensional CT methods are available to measure regional bone
mineral density (rBMD) in contiguously spaced small volumes and have b
een applied to the assessment of macroarchitecture in vertebrae. The m
ore detailed rBMD methods produce radiation exposures to the subject s
imilar to lumbar radiography and substantially higher than traditional
QCT. The cancellous bone within lumbar vertebral bodies has been foun
d in cross-sectional studies to have increased density in the inferior
, posterior and lateral regions. Notably, regions with higher density
at age 40 have a larger decline with age. The vertebral body cortex de
clines with age at a slower rate than observed for cancellous bone; ho
wever, the decline with age of cortical bone appears to vary substanti
ally amongst subjects. The amount of cortical bone in the anterior por
tion of the body is less than in the lateral portion, which may explai
n previous discrepancies in assessing the fraction of vertebral body b
one in the cortex.