Kaplan F S, Dalinka M, Karp J S, Fallon M D, Katz M, Boden S, Simpson E, Attie M, Haddad J G
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia.
Orthopedics. 1989 Jul;12(7):949-55. doi: 10.3928/0147-7447-19890701-07.
We studied the relationship between spontaneous vertebral compression fractures and lumbar vertebral trabecular bone density in 69 consecutive patients with suspected osteopenia. Seven had biopsy-confirmed osteomalacia. The remaining 62 were divided into three groups: group 1--asymptomatic patients suspected of having osteopenia on plain films, but with no vertebral compression fractures (N = 24); group II--those with one to five vertebral compression fractures (N = 16); and group III--those with six or more vertebral compression fractures (N = 22). A quantitative computed tomographic (QCT) scan of the lumbar spine was performed on all patients. Patients in group I had QCT values of 94 +/- 23 mg/cm3 (mean +/- SE); those in group II had QCT values of 66 +/- 28 mg/cm3; and those in group III had values of 34 +/- 28 mg/cm3. There were significant differences among all groups (P less than .001), although there was considerable overlap of individuals among the groups. There was no significant difference between the mean QCT value of patients with one compression fracture and the value of those with between two and five compression fractures. Patients with biopsy-proven osteomalacia had higher vertebral trabecular bone density than patients with osteoporosis and compression fractures. Our study provides evidence suggesting a strong inverse relationship between QCT-measured vertebral bone density and the presence of vertebral compression fractures in a group of osteopenic patients.