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- Title
Age-related trends in vertebral dimensions.
- Authors
Junno, Juho‐Antti; Paananen, Markus; Karppinen, Jaro; Niinimäki, Jaakko; Niskanen, Markku; Maijanen, Heli; Väre, Tiina; Järvelin, Marjo‐Riitta; Nieminen, Miika T.; Tuukkanen, Juha; Ruff, Christopher
- Abstract
Several studies have demonstrated age-related changes in vertebral dimensions. Vertebral size has been reported to increase among elderly adults, with periosteal apposition resulting in increased cross-sectional area ( CSA) of the vertebral corpus combined with reduction in bone mineral density. These changes in CSA are observed to be sex-specific, as the pronounced increase of vertebral CSA is found only in elderly males. However, the reduction in bone mineral density in old age is apparent within both sexes. It is thus hypothesized that higher fracture risk in elderly women is a result of their incapacity to increase vertebral size and thus adapt to bone mineral reduction. In this study, our aim was to explore whether the onset of these changes could be ascribed to specific age intervals and whether the proposed differences between the sexes are as great as previously suggested. To conduct this study we utilized two large early 20th century skeletal collections known as Terry and Bass ( n = 181). We also utilized data from two lumbar spine magnetic resonance imaging samples as a modern-day reference ( n = 497). Age, sex and ethnicity of all individuals were known. Vertebral CSA was determined by measuring three width and length dimensions from the corpus of the fourth lumbar vertebra (L4). Our results indicate only a moderate association between age and vertebral CSA. This association was observed to be relatively similar in both sexes, and we thus conclude that there is no clear sex-specific compensatory mechanism for age-related bone loss in vertebral size.
- Subjects
VERTEBRAE; RISK factors of fractures; BONE densitometry; LUMBAR vertebrae; MAGNETIC resonance imaging
- Publication
Journal of Anatomy, 2015, Vol 226, Issue 5, p434
- ISSN
0021-8782
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/joa.12295