Clinical Utility of a Semiquantitative Method Using Lumbar Radiography as a Screening Tool for Osteoporosis in Elderly Subjects

BACKGROUND Osteoporosis is a major global public health problem in the current aging era. Osteoporosis is often diagnosed only after patients have a fracture that causes a severe decline in ability to perform activities of daily life. Although the current criterion standard for diagnosing osteoporos...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical science monitor 2019-09, Vol.25, p.6928-6934
Hauptverfasser: Kunitoki, Keiko, Mutoh, Tatsushi, Tatewaki, Yasuko, Takano, Yumi, Yamamoto, Shuzo, Shimomura, Hideo, Nakagawa, Manabu, Arai, Hiroyuki, Taki, Yasuyuki
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BACKGROUND Osteoporosis is a major global public health problem in the current aging era. Osteoporosis is often diagnosed only after patients have a fracture that causes a severe decline in ability to perform activities of daily life. Although the current criterion standard for diagnosing osteoporosis is dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), this modality remains less prevalent among general practitioners in geriatric medicine. The aim of this study was to determine the diagnostic utility of visual inspection of lumbar radiography in detecting bone mineral density (BMD) decline. MATERIAL AND METHODS We retrospectively reviewed medical data of 78 patients who underwent both lateral lumbar radiography and DXA. Board-certified radiologists determined the clinical grade of each patient's condition according to the semiquantitative (SQ) method of lumbar fracture assessment. We compared the grades and young adult means of BMD in the lumbar spine and hips as measured using DXA. RESULTS BMD of the femoral neck was significantly lower in patients with severe osteoporosis (grades 2 and 3 as classified using the SQ method) than in those with mild osteoporosis (grades 0 and 1; P
ISSN:1643-3750
1234-1010
1643-3750
DOI:10.12659/msm.917035