4.5 Article

Predicting ex vivo failure loads in human metatarsals using bone strength indices derived from volumetric quantitative computed tomography

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS
Volume 46, Issue 4, Pages 745-750

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2012.11.019

Keywords

Bone; Imaging; Metatarsal; Fracture testing; Quantitative computed tomography

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R03 HD068660/NICHD, T32 HD007434-18/NICHD, P30 AR057235/NIAMS, R21 DK079457/NIDDK, UL1 RR024992/NCRR]

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We investigated the capacity of bone quantity and bone geometric strength indices to predict ultimate force in the human second metatarsal (Met2) and third metatarsal (Met3). Intact lower extremity cadaver samples were measured using clinical, volumetric quantitative computed tomography (vQCT) with positioning and parameters applicable to in vivo scanning. During processing, raw voxel data (0.4 mm isotropic voxels) were converted from Hounsfield units to apparent bone mineral density (BMD) using hydroxyapatite calibration phantoms to allow direct volumetric assessment of whole-bone and subregional metatarsal BMD. Voxel data were realigned to produce cross-sectional slices perpendicular to the longitudinal axes of the metatarsals. Average mid-diaphyseal BMD, bone thickness, and buckling ratio were measured using an optimized threshold to distinguish bone from non-bone material. Minimum and maximum moments of inertia and section moduli were measured in the mid-diaphysis region using both a binary threshold for areal, unit-density measures and a novel technique for density-weighted measures. BMD and geometric strength indices were strongly correlated to ultimate force measured by ex vivo 3-point bending. Geometric indices were more highly correlated to ultimate force than was BMD; bone thickness and density-weighted minimum section modulus had the highest individual correlations to ultimate force. Density-weighted geometric indices explained more variance than their binary analogs. Multiple regression analyses defined models that predicted 85-89% of variance in ultimate force in Met2 and Met3 using bone thickness and minimum section modulus in the mid-diaphysis. These results have implications for future in vivo imaging to non-invasively assess bone strength and metatarsal fracture risk. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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