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Distal radial cortical bone thickness correlates with bone mineral density and can predict osteoporosis: a cohort study

•We found a positive correlation between the distal radial cortical bone thickness measured on radiographs and the bone mineral density.•These findings may provide the clinician with a valuable and easy method to estimate bone Quality.•It would be helpful to rule out osteoporosis using simple equati...

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Published in:Injury 2020-11, Vol.51 (11), p.2617-2621
Main Authors: Ye, ChunXiao, Guo, YingBin, Zheng, YouHui, Wu, ZhenBin, Chen, KaiYu, Zhang, XiaoLing, Xiao, LiangXiu, Chen, ZhiMing
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•We found a positive correlation between the distal radial cortical bone thickness measured on radiographs and the bone mineral density.•These findings may provide the clinician with a valuable and easy method to estimate bone Quality.•It would be helpful to rule out osteoporosis using simple equations.. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the correlation of the bone mineral density (BMD) of the hip and lumbar spine with the distal radius cortical thickness (DRCT) measured on anteroposterior radiographs and establish a method for predicting osteoporosis. We assessed 147 patients aged ≥50 years with distal radius fractures who underwent wrist radiographs and dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. The DRCT was measured and calculated at two levels of the distal radius of the injured wrist on the radiographs. The intra-rater and inter-rater reliability of measures was excellent (intraclass correlation coefficient >0.85). In the Pearson correlation and simple linear regression analyses, the DRCT was positively correlated with hip BMD (r = 0.393, P < 0.01) and lumbar spine BMD (r = 0.529, P < 0.01). Each 1-mm increase in DRCT was associated with a 0.051-g/cm2 increase in hip BMD (R2 = 0.154, P < 0.01) and a 0.080-g/cm2 increase in lumbar spine BMD (R2 = 0.280, P < 0.01). A DRCT of 5.1 mm was selected as the cutoff point for predicting osteoporosis, with the highest Youden index of 0.560, 83.3% sensitivity, 72.7% specificity, and a 66.7% negative predictive value. Cortical thickness measurements obtained from anteroposterior wrist radiographs were positively correlated with hip and lumbar spine BMD measurements. This technique is suggested as a rapid, inexpensive, and sensitive method for predicting osteoporosis. Diagnostic II
ISSN:0020-1383
1879-0267
DOI:10.1016/j.injury.2020.08.018