Abstract

ABSTRACTClinical evaluation of fracture healing is often limited to an assessment of fracture bridging from radiographic images, without consideration for other aspects of bone quality. However, recent advances in HRpQCT offer methods to accurately monitor microstructural bone remodeling throughout the healing process. In this study, local bone formation and resorption were investigated during the first year post fracture in both the fractured (n = 22) and contralateral (n = 19) radii of 34 conservatively treated patients (24 female, 10 male) who presented with a unilateral radius fracture at the Innsbruck University Hospital, Austria. HRpQCT images and clinical metrics were acquired at six time points for each patient. The standard HRpQCT image acquisition was captured for all radii, with additional distal and proximal image acquisitions for the fractured radii. Measured radial bone densities were isolated with a voxel‐based mask and images were rigidly registered to images from the previous imaging session using a pyramid‐based approach. From the registered images, bone formation and resorption volume fractions were quantified for multiple density‐based thresholds and compared between the fractured and contralateral radius and relative to demographics, bone morphometrics, and fracture metrics using regression. Compared with the contralateral radius, both bone formation and resorption were significantly increased in the fractured radius throughout the study for nearly all evaluated thresholds. Higher density cortical bone formation continually increased throughout the duration of the study and was significantly greater than resorption during late‐stage healing in both the fractured and intact regions of the radius. With the small and diverse study population, only weak relationships between fracture remodeling and patient‐specific parameters were unveiled. However this study provides methods for the analysis of local bone remodeling during fracture healing and highlights relevant considerations for future studies, specifically that remodeling postfracture is likely to continue beyond 12‐months postfracture. © 2021 The Authors. JBMR Plus published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.

Highlights

  • Distal radius fractures are the most common fracture in adults and, when resultant of low-energy trauma, are indicative of possibly underlying osteoporosis and decreased bone quality.[1,2,3] The clinical assessment of healing in these fractures often includes patient-reported pain and function combined with radiographic assessment of cortical bridging

  • From the 34 patients with sufficient image quality who were included in this study, images from all six time points of the fractured radius were of sufficient quality for 22 patients and of the

  • 3D-image registration has previously been applied to fractured radii and the combined use of both image registration and bone remodeling analysis has been applied to patients with diminishing bone quality and rheumatoid arthritis,(9–11,14) our study is the first to evaluate localized bone remodeling throughout the process of fracture healing in humans

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Summary

Introduction

Distal radius fractures are the most common fracture in adults and, when resultant of low-energy trauma, are indicative of possibly underlying osteoporosis and decreased bone quality.[1,2,3] The clinical assessment of healing in these fractures often includes patient-reported pain and function combined with radiographic assessment of cortical bridging. Measures of pain and function are subjective and cannot provide direct insight to fracture union,(4) radiographic assessment provides visualization of cortical bridging that directly indicates healing. The lack of standardization and the 1 of 17 n. Morphometric measures of the contralateral radius DXA T score. Yb BMI, kg/m2b Tb.BV/TVb Tb.Th, mmc Tb.Sp, mmc Tb.N, mm−1b Tb.vBMD, mg HA/cm3c Ct.Th, mmb. Ct.Po, %c Ct.vBMD, mg HA/cm3c Tt.vBMD, mg HA/cm3b

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