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Formation Dominates Resorption With Increasing Mineralized Density and Time Postfracture in Cortical but Not Trabecular Bone: A Longitudinal HRpQCT Imaging Study in the Distal Radius

Clinical evaluation of fracture healing is often limited to an assessment of fracture bridging from radiographic images, without consideration for other aspects of bone quality. However, recent advances in HRpQCT offer methods to accurately monitor microstructural bone remodeling throughout the heal...

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Autores principales: Atkins, Penny R, Stock, Kerstin, Ohs, Nicholas, Collins, Caitlyn J, Horling, Lukas, Benedikt, Stefan, Degenhart, Gerald, Lippuner, Kurt, Blauth, Michael, Christen, Patrik, Müller, Ralph
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8216136/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34189382
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jbm4.10493
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author Atkins, Penny R
Stock, Kerstin
Ohs, Nicholas
Collins, Caitlyn J
Horling, Lukas
Benedikt, Stefan
Degenhart, Gerald
Lippuner, Kurt
Blauth, Michael
Christen, Patrik
Müller, Ralph
author_facet Atkins, Penny R
Stock, Kerstin
Ohs, Nicholas
Collins, Caitlyn J
Horling, Lukas
Benedikt, Stefan
Degenhart, Gerald
Lippuner, Kurt
Blauth, Michael
Christen, Patrik
Müller, Ralph
author_sort Atkins, Penny R
collection PubMed
description Clinical evaluation of fracture healing is often limited to an assessment of fracture bridging from radiographic images, without consideration for other aspects of bone quality. However, recent advances in HRpQCT offer methods to accurately monitor microstructural bone remodeling throughout the healing process. In this study, local bone formation and resorption were investigated during the first year post fracture in both the fractured (n = 22) and contralateral (n = 19) radii of 34 conservatively treated patients (24 female, 10 male) who presented with a unilateral radius fracture at the Innsbruck University Hospital, Austria. HRpQCT images and clinical metrics were acquired at six time points for each patient. The standard HRpQCT image acquisition was captured for all radii, with additional distal and proximal image acquisitions for the fractured radii. Measured radial bone densities were isolated with a voxel‐based mask and images were rigidly registered to images from the previous imaging session using a pyramid‐based approach. From the registered images, bone formation and resorption volume fractions were quantified for multiple density‐based thresholds and compared between the fractured and contralateral radius and relative to demographics, bone morphometrics, and fracture metrics using regression. Compared with the contralateral radius, both bone formation and resorption were significantly increased in the fractured radius throughout the study for nearly all evaluated thresholds. Higher density cortical bone formation continually increased throughout the duration of the study and was significantly greater than resorption during late‐stage healing in both the fractured and intact regions of the radius. With the small and diverse study population, only weak relationships between fracture remodeling and patient‐specific parameters were unveiled. However this study provides methods for the analysis of local bone remodeling during fracture healing and highlights relevant considerations for future studies, specifically that remodeling postfracture is likely to continue beyond 12‐months postfracture. © 2021 The Authors. JBMR Plus published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
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spelling pubmed-82161362021-06-28 Formation Dominates Resorption With Increasing Mineralized Density and Time Postfracture in Cortical but Not Trabecular Bone: A Longitudinal HRpQCT Imaging Study in the Distal Radius Atkins, Penny R Stock, Kerstin Ohs, Nicholas Collins, Caitlyn J Horling, Lukas Benedikt, Stefan Degenhart, Gerald Lippuner, Kurt Blauth, Michael Christen, Patrik Müller, Ralph JBMR Plus Original Articles Clinical evaluation of fracture healing is often limited to an assessment of fracture bridging from radiographic images, without consideration for other aspects of bone quality. However, recent advances in HRpQCT offer methods to accurately monitor microstructural bone remodeling throughout the healing process. In this study, local bone formation and resorption were investigated during the first year post fracture in both the fractured (n = 22) and contralateral (n = 19) radii of 34 conservatively treated patients (24 female, 10 male) who presented with a unilateral radius fracture at the Innsbruck University Hospital, Austria. HRpQCT images and clinical metrics were acquired at six time points for each patient. The standard HRpQCT image acquisition was captured for all radii, with additional distal and proximal image acquisitions for the fractured radii. Measured radial bone densities were isolated with a voxel‐based mask and images were rigidly registered to images from the previous imaging session using a pyramid‐based approach. From the registered images, bone formation and resorption volume fractions were quantified for multiple density‐based thresholds and compared between the fractured and contralateral radius and relative to demographics, bone morphometrics, and fracture metrics using regression. Compared with the contralateral radius, both bone formation and resorption were significantly increased in the fractured radius throughout the study for nearly all evaluated thresholds. Higher density cortical bone formation continually increased throughout the duration of the study and was significantly greater than resorption during late‐stage healing in both the fractured and intact regions of the radius. With the small and diverse study population, only weak relationships between fracture remodeling and patient‐specific parameters were unveiled. However this study provides methods for the analysis of local bone remodeling during fracture healing and highlights relevant considerations for future studies, specifically that remodeling postfracture is likely to continue beyond 12‐months postfracture. © 2021 The Authors. JBMR Plus published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2021-04-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8216136/ /pubmed/34189382 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jbm4.10493 Text en © 2021 The Authors. JBMR Plus published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Atkins, Penny R
Stock, Kerstin
Ohs, Nicholas
Collins, Caitlyn J
Horling, Lukas
Benedikt, Stefan
Degenhart, Gerald
Lippuner, Kurt
Blauth, Michael
Christen, Patrik
Müller, Ralph
Formation Dominates Resorption With Increasing Mineralized Density and Time Postfracture in Cortical but Not Trabecular Bone: A Longitudinal HRpQCT Imaging Study in the Distal Radius
title Formation Dominates Resorption With Increasing Mineralized Density and Time Postfracture in Cortical but Not Trabecular Bone: A Longitudinal HRpQCT Imaging Study in the Distal Radius
title_full Formation Dominates Resorption With Increasing Mineralized Density and Time Postfracture in Cortical but Not Trabecular Bone: A Longitudinal HRpQCT Imaging Study in the Distal Radius
title_fullStr Formation Dominates Resorption With Increasing Mineralized Density and Time Postfracture in Cortical but Not Trabecular Bone: A Longitudinal HRpQCT Imaging Study in the Distal Radius
title_full_unstemmed Formation Dominates Resorption With Increasing Mineralized Density and Time Postfracture in Cortical but Not Trabecular Bone: A Longitudinal HRpQCT Imaging Study in the Distal Radius
title_short Formation Dominates Resorption With Increasing Mineralized Density and Time Postfracture in Cortical but Not Trabecular Bone: A Longitudinal HRpQCT Imaging Study in the Distal Radius
title_sort formation dominates resorption with increasing mineralized density and time postfracture in cortical but not trabecular bone: a longitudinal hrpqct imaging study in the distal radius
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8216136/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34189382
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jbm4.10493
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