Individuals with heterogenous trabecular bone texture by clinical magnetic resonance imaging have lower bone strength and stiffness by quantitative computed tomography-based finite element analysis.

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Tác giả: Emma Billings, Olivia Blumberg, Ryan Breighner, Alexander S Dash, Fernando Quevedo Gonzalez, Alison Heilbronner, Matthew F Koff, Jeri Nieves, Emily M Stein

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 972.9505 *West Indies (Antilles) and Bermuda

Thông tin xuất bản: England : Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 700635

 Opportunistic screening is essential to improve the identification of individuals with osteoporosis. Our group has utilized image texture features to assess bone quality using clinical MRIs. We have previously demonstrated that greater heterogeneity of MRI texture related to history of fragility fractures, lower bone density, and worse microarchitecture. The present study investigated relationships between MRI-based texture features and biomechanical properties of bone using CT-based finite element analyses (FEAs). We hypothesized that individuals with greater texture heterogeneity would have lower stiffness and failure load. Thirty individuals included in this prospective study had CT and MRI of L1 and L2 vertebrae. Using T1-weighted MR images, a gray-level co-occurrence matrix was generated to characterize the distribution and spatial organization of voxelar signal intensities to derive the following texture features: contrast (variability), entropy (disorder), angular second moment (ASM
  uniformity), and inverse difference moment (IDM
  homogeneity). Features were calculated in five directions relative to the image plane. Whole-bone stiffness and failure load were calculated from phantom-calibrated lumbar QCT. Mean age of subjects was 59 ± 11 yr (57% female). Individuals with lower vertebral stiffness had greater texture heterogeneity
  specifically, higher contrast (r = -0.54, p <
  .01), higher entropy (r = -0.52, p <
  .01), lower IDM (r = 0.54, p <
  .01) and lower ASM (r = 0.51, p <
  .01). Lower vertebral failure load and lower vBMD were similarly associated with greater texture heterogeneity. Relationships were unchanged when using the average of texture in all directions or the vertical direction in isolation. In summary, individuals with more heterogeneous MRI-based trabecular texture had lower stiffness and failure load by FEA, and lower vBMD by central quantitative CT. These results-the first relating MRI-based texture features and biomechanical properties of bone-provide further support that MRI-based texture measurements can be used to opportunistically detect skeletal fragility.
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