Hip Strentgh Analysis By Dual Energy X-Ray Absorbtiometry in Nephrolithiasis Patients
Author(s) -
Aynur Özen,
İlhan Karacan,
M.A. Sarıyıldız,
Muharrem Çidem,
İnönü Mah,
Sok Üftade
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
the annals of clinical and analytical medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2667-663X
DOI - 10.4328/jcam.2431
Subject(s) - medicine , dual energy , dual (grammatical number) , dual purpose , surgery , general surgery , literature , mechanical engineering , art , bone mineral , osteoporosis , engineering
Aim: The aim of this study was to assess the hip geometric parameters measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry in patients with kidney stones and to compare normal population. Material and Method: This study is retrospectively evaluation and performed hip structural analysis of another prospective study data, included 72 patients with kidney stones (29 female, 43 male) and 94 control subjects (31 women, 63 men). Bone mineral density and structural parameters such as hip axis length, cross-sectional area, cross-sectional moment of inertia, femur strength index and section modulus of femur neck have been measured in each groups. Results: The patients and control subjects were anthropometrically identical (P>0.05). There were no statistical difference for hip axis length, cross-sectional area, cross-sectional moment of inertia and section modulus between of groups when take into consideration of gender effect (P>0.05). The presence of nephrolithiasis was determined that there was not predictive effects on femur neck bone mineral density, hip axis length, cross-sectional moment of inertia, section modulus, femur strength index and cross-sectional area. To be female gender was a negatif effect on bone mineral density, hip axis length, cross-sectional moment of inertia and section modulus. Discussion: As a conclusion, we did not found any differences on bone mineral density and hip structural parameters measured with hip strength analysis program between nephrolithiasis patients and normal subjects at 20-50 ages. We thought that in these patients had high fracture rates determined previous studies especially in older ages, bone metabolic and geometric changes may start or/and fast with aging together other cause of loss of bone mineral (e.g. postmenopausal osteoporosis)
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