Abstract
Osteoporosis is common in haemophilic arthropathy. Quantitative ultrasound (QUS) can be a suitable alternative for dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry for diagnosing osteoporosis in haemophiliacs due to its lack of ionizing radiation, and ease to use. We investigated the intra- and inter-operator reliability of QUS, its responsiveness to bone growth, its ability to differentiate bone adjacent to blood-injected vs. control joints, and the effect of soft tissues on the speed of sound (SOS) QUS values in a juvenile white New Zealand rabbit model of blood-induced arthritis. Eight of 16 rabbits were injected with autologous blood (0.1 mL kg(-1) ) 8 times over a 17-week period, the remaining eight rabbits served as controls. SOS was measured at baseline, weeks 8 and 17 in vivo and after the bones were excised on week 17. Intra- and inter-operator coefficients of variation for QUS data were <5% and intraclass correlation coefficients were >60% for 22/27 (81.5%) of bones assessed. The level of interval increase in SOS values from baseline to week 17 was significantly different in tibiae of injected, contralateral to injected and non-injected knee groups by anova (P = 0.01). In vivo (mean ± SD, 4147.17 ± 96.27 m s(-1) ) and postmortem (4457.85 ± 104.00 m s(-1) ) measurements on week 17 differed (P < 0.01) indicating an effect of soft tissues on SOS. In conclusion, QUS' acceptable reliability, its responsiveness to growth-related changes and its ability to discriminate injected and non-injected joints make this technique a plausible candidate as a diagnostic tool for osteoporosis in the paediatric haemophilic population if these results are confirmed upon animal-human translation.
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More From: Haemophilia : the official journal of the World Federation of Hemophilia
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