Regional analysis of bone mineral density in the distal femur and proximal tibia using peripheral quantitative computed tomography in the rat In vivo.

1996 
The use of peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT) was investigated for the measurement of volumetric bone mineral density (BMD) in mg·cm−3. Two studies were undertaken. In the first study, the precision of pQCTin vivo andex vivo was tested at 14 weeks postovariectomy (OVX). In the second study, the efficacy of a standard antiresorptive treatment, 17β-estradiol (E2), was tested 6 weeks post-OVX. The precision for total (compact plus trabecular) BMD was 1.3–1.9%, and that for trabecular BMD was 2.4–2.7%. There was excellent agreement between trabecular BMD measurementsin vivo andex vivo (r=0.91). Significant reductions in trabecular BMD were observedin vivo at 14 and 6 weeks following ovariectomy in the femur, in each study. The loss of trabecular BMD depended on slice location, and varied from 0 to 22% at 6 weeks, and from 0 to 26% at 14 weeks (P<0.001, at the affected locations). The antiresorptive effect of treatment was demonstrated in the 6-week study: there was no significant difference in BMD between sham-operated and E2-treated OVX rats.
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