Journal article

Fracture risk and height: An association partly accounted for by cortical porosity of relatively thinner cortices

A Bjørnerem, QM Bui, A Ghasem-Zadeh, JL Hopper, R Zebaze, E Seeman

Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | WILEY | Published : 2013

Abstract

Taller women are at increased risk for fracture despite having wider bones that better tolerate bending. Because wider bones require less material to achieve a given bending strength, we hypothesized that taller women assemble bones with relatively thinner and more porous cortices because excavation of a larger medullary canal may be accompanied by excavation of more intracortical canals. Three-dimensional images of distal tibia, fibula, and radius were obtained in vivo using high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HRpQCT) in a twin study of 345 females aged 40 to 61 years, 93 with at least one fracture. Cortical porosity 100 μm, and microarchitecture, were quantified us..

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Grants

Awarded by Research Council of Norway (RCN)


Awarded by National Health & Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia


Funding Acknowledgements

This study was funded by the Research Council of Norway (RCN) Grant (ID 178588/V50). This research was facilitated through access to the Australian Twin Registry, a national resource supported by an Enabling Grant (ID 628911) from the National Health & Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia. We thank the twins for their participation, and Kylie King for assistance in patient recruitment.