Science of DEXA Flashcards
What is Osteoporosis
A health condition that weakens bones, making them fragile and more susceptible to fractures
Risk factors of Osteoporosis (4)
Menopausal related deficiency in oestrogen
Calcium deficiency
lifestyle
Genetic predisposition
Osteoporosis on x-ray (3)
Impression of decreased bone density
Loss of mass on bony trabeculae (inner) and not the cortex (outer)
Compression fractures to vertebral bodies can be detected
What is DEXA (5)
Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry
Bone is isolated from soft tissue attenuation by scanning with 2 different x-ray energies: a fan beam and pencil beams
The denser the bone, the fewer x-ray photons transmitted
Information based on attenuation extracted and computed for data analysis
Photons transmitted are measured against pre-determined standards for young healthy adults
Data analysis in DEXA (2)
Includes a T-score and Z-score
What is a T Score
an indication of the number of standard deviation between the measurement and the standard data.
Indicates fracture risk
What is a Z Score
compares the individual measurement to a data mean for a similarly aged population.
Indicates need for further evaluation of reasons for osteoporosis
How DEXA works (3)
- X-ray photons of two different energies from 2 different sources in an alternating fashion at set frequencies are directed toward the patient lying below a detector
- Pencil beam, Fan beam technology require the linear displacement of the detector which moves backward and forward under the patient’s body via a C-arm assembly.
- Results are derived from the photons hitting the detectors, not from the scan image. In DEXA the image is only used to confirm patient position
Limitations and issues with DEXA scanning (4)
- Object to image receptor distance: affects size distortion on the resulting image
- DEXA is of limited use in people with spinal deformity or those who have had previous spinal surgery/artefacts
- Very low resolution: cannot be used for diagnostic apart from bone mineral density (BMD) measurements
- Does not determine the reason for low BMD
Advantages of DEXA (6)
- Inexpensive
- Improving reliablity
- Small radiation dose
- Stable calibration
- Sensitive and accurate in measurements of subtle changes in BMD over time or following drug therapy
- Can predict risk of future fractures
Disadvantage of DEXA (4)
- Low resolution images with single parameter investigation
- 2D images
- Cannot distinguish between corticle and trabecular bone
- Manufacturer inconsistencies
Future developments (6)
- Mainly new application coupled with advances in technology:
- Abdominal aorta calcification assessment
- Fractuer risk assessment - vertebral fracture assessment
- Computer aided fracture assessment
- Body composition
- Automated hip implant analysis