Abstract

Severe bone resorption is a vexing clinical problem, especially in patients without teeth. To study resorption in vivo, measurements of bone mineral density (BMD) of the mandible of both patients with and without teeth are needed. Using a Hologic QDR-1000 bone densitometer designed to measure lumbar spine and hips, ex vivo and in vivo measurements were made in selected areas of the mandible. The mandible was positioned such that the X-ray beam was perpendicular to its sagittal plane. In this way the beam hits first one half of the mandible and then the other. The reproducibility—expressed as coefficient of variation—of the ex vivo measurements was 0.5%. For in vivo measurements this coefficient was 3%. The method used for mandibular BMD would make it possible to define an average BMD in several categories of the normal population and of patients, and to compare bone density in the mandible with that in the axial and perpendicular skeleton. Improvement may be obtained by repeating the measurement. The entrance dose per scan is low, equalling that of one bitewing/radiograph.

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