Assessing skeletal muscle radiodensity by computed tomography: An integrative review of the applied methodologies.

2020 
Low-radiodensity skeletal muscle has been related to the degree of muscle fat infiltration and seems to be associated to worse outcomes. The aim of this study was to summarize the methodologies used to appraise skeletal muscle radiodensity by computed tomography, to describe the terms used in the literature to define muscle radiodensity, and to give recommendations for its measurement standardization. An integrative bibliographic review in four databases included studies published until August 2019 in Portuguese, English or Spanish; performed in humans, adults and/or elderly, of both sex; which investigated skeletal muscle radiodensity through computed tomography (CT) of the region between the third and fifth lumbar vertebrae and evaluated at least two muscular groups. One hundred and seventeen studies were selected. We observed a trend toward selecting all abdominal region muscle. A significant methodological variation in terms of contrast use, selection of skeletal muscle areas, radiodensity ranges delimitation and their cut-off points, as well as the terminologies used were also found. The methodological differences detected are probably due to the lack of more precise information about the correlation between skeletal muscle radiodensity by CT and its molecular composition, among others. Therefore, until the gaps are addressed in future studies, authors should avoid arbitrary approaches when reporting skeletal muscle radiodensity, especially when it comes to prognosis inference. Studies using both CT and direct methods of muscle composition evaluation are encouraged, to enable the definition and validation of the best approach to classify fat infiltrated muscle tissue, which will favor the nomenclature uniformization.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    172
    References
    12
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []