Abstract

Introduction: Cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States. Aortic calcification shows strong promise towards preventative screening efforts for cardiovascular risk in clinical and subclinical populations. While still relatively novel, granular distributions of aortic calcium in reference populations are absent from the literature. Methods: All participants of the Reference Analytic Morphomics Population, an approximation of vehicle occupants in the United States, with abdominal scans were considered for this analysis (n=4080). Analytic Morphomics was used to obtain vertebral-indexed anatomical measurements of the aorta and calcium characteristics (area, volume, density, and aortic wall obfuscation). Calcification was specifically identified as regions with a given morphology and pixel value three standard deviations above the defined central lumen zone. Results: Participant mean age was 33 (SD 22.6) and were mostly male (62.6%) due to the prevalence of males involved in trauma. Age and calcification distributions were right skewed among all vertebral levels and highest for the L3-L4 reference levels [~3% wall obfuscation (SD 10.5-11.3)]. Males demonstrated a progressive increase in total calcium volume from the 4 th decade of age, while females had comparatively smaller increases and a dramatic increase in total calcium after the 7 th decade. The largest increases in observed calcium volumes were observed in the 8 th decade for males (~2300 cm 3 ) and 7 th for females (~4500 cm 3 ). Conclusion: Aortic calcium prevalence was higher with reference to lower vertebral levels. Dramatic differential distributions of calcium were observed by age and sex.

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