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Preferential low bone mineral density of the femoral neck in patients with a recent fracture of the proximal femur

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Abstract

Bone mass is an important determinant of resistance to fractures. Whether bone mineral density (BMD) in subjects with a fracture of the proximal femur (hip fracture) is different from that of age-matched controls is still debated. We measured BMD of the femoral neck (FN) on the opposite side to the fracture, as well as femoral shaft (FS) and lumbar spine (LS) BMD by dual-photon absorptiometry in 68 patients (57 women and 11 men, mean age 78.8±1.0) 12.4±0.8 days after hip fracture following a moderate trauma. These values were compared with BMD of 93 non-fractured elderly control subjects (82 women and 11 men), measured during the same period. As compared with the controls, FN BMD was significantly lower in fractured women (0.592±0.013 v. 0.728±0.014 g/cm2,P<0.001) and in fractured men (0.697±0.029 v. 0.840±0.052,P<0.05). Expressed as standard deviations above or below the mean BMD of age and sex-matched normal subjects (Z-score), the difference in FN BMD between fractured women and controls was highly significant (−0.6±0.1 v. +0.1±0.1,P<0.001). As compared with mean BMD of young normal subjects, BMD was decreased by 36.9±1.4 and 22.4±1.5% (P<0.001) in fractured and control women, respectively. There was no significant difference between FN BMD of 33 women with cervical and 24 with trochanteric hip fractures (0.603±0.017 v. 0.577±0.020). FN BMD was lower than 0.705 g/cm2 in 90% of fractured women. The prevalence of fracture increased with decreasing FN BMD, reaching 100% with values below 0.500 g/cm2. FS and LS BMD were significantly lower in women with hip fracture than in controls (1.388±0.036 v. 1.580±0.030,P<0.001, for FS, and 0.886±0.027 v. 0.985±0.023,P<0.01, for LS), but these differences were not significant when expressed as a Z-score. In men with a recent hip fracture, FS BMD was significantly lower than in controls (1.729±0.096 v. 2.069±0.062,P<0.01), but the difference at the LS level did not reach statistical significance. These results indicate that both women and men with a recent hip fracture had decreased bone mineral density of the femoral neck, femoral shaft and lumbar spine. However, the difference appeared to be of higher magnitude for the femoral neck suggesting a preferential bone loss at this site.

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Chevalley, T., Rizzoli, R., Nydegger, V. et al. Preferential low bone mineral density of the femoral neck in patients with a recent fracture of the proximal femur. Osteoporosis Int 1, 147–154 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01625444

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