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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Development of image-based beam model for assessment of osteoporotic hip fracture risk

Yang, Huijuan 28 March 2017 (has links)
Hip fracture has been identified as a major worldwide health problem among the elderly population. A fast, accurate and effective evaluation of hip fracture risk is essential for accurate health care planning and selecting a proper treatment. Therefore, the high applicability and the universal availability are required for assessing a technique. The objective of this study was to develop a two-dimensional subject-specific beam model, which is easy to be adopted into a clinical environment to assess hip fracture risk. First, the equivalence between CTXA (computed tomography X-ray absorptiometry) and QCT (quantitative computed tomography) derived femur cross-section stiffness was studied. Then, the CTXA-based femur cross-section stiffness was used in the beam model to calculate the hip fracture risk index (FRI) during sideways fall and single-leg stance loading configuration. Finally, the test of discrimination between PPI (proton-pump inhibitor) users and non-PPI users based on cross-sectional stiffness, BMD (bone mineral density) and FRI was conducted to demonstrate if PPI use is associated with the presence of osteoporosis or accelerated BMD loss. Strong correlation is found between CTXA and QCT derived femur cross-section stiffness, which indicates that QCT can be replaced by CTXA in assessing femur bone quality. Therefore, DXA can be a replacement of QCT to calculate femur cross-sectional properties due to the equivalence between CTXA and DXA derived mechanical properties. It is also demonstrated that the cross-sectional stiffness, BMD, and FRI cannot discriminate the PPI users from non-PPI users, which means that there is no difference between PPI users and non-PPI users in cross-sectional stiffness, BMD, and FRI. This may suggested that PPI use is not associated with the presence of osteoporosis or accelerated BMD loss. The proposed beam model can be easily adopted into clinic to predict hip fracture risk, and this beam model derived FRI can be used in some clinical verification. Yet its accuracy of discriminate fracture will be investigated in a future study. / May 2017

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