<p class="first" id="d1773525e216">This position development conference (PDC) Task
Force examined the assessment of bone
status in orthopedic surgery patients. Key questions included which orthopedic surgery
patients should be evaluated for poor bone health prior to surgery and which subsets
of patients are at high risk for poor bone health and adverse outcomes. Second, the
reliability and validity of using bone densitometry techniques and measurement of
specific geometries around the hip and knee before and after arthroplasty was determined.
Finally, the use of computed tomography (CT) attenuation coefficients (Hounsfield
units) to estimate bone quality at anatomic locations where orthopedic surgery is
performed including femur, tibia, shoulder, wrist, and ankle were reviewed. The literature
review identified 665 articles of which 198 met inclusion exclusion criteria and were
selected based on reporting of methodology, reliability, or validity results. We recommend
that the orthopedic surgeon be aware of established ISCD guidelines for determining
who should have additional screening for osteoporosis. Patients with inflammatory
arthritis, chronic corticosteroid use, chronic renal disease, and those with history
of fracture after age 50 are at high risk of osteoporosis and adverse events from
surgery and should have dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) screening before surgery.
In addition to standard DXA, bone mineral density (BMD) measurement along the femur
and proximal tibia is reliable and valid around implants and can provide valuable
information regarding bone remodeling and identification of loosening. Attention to
positioning, selection of regions of interest, and use of special techniques and software
is required. Plain radiographs and CT provide simple, reliable methods to classify
the shape of the proximal femur and to predict osteoporosis; these include the Dorr
Classification, Cortical Index, and critical thickness. Correlation of these indices
to central BMD is moderate to good. Many patients undergoing orthopedic surgery have
had preoperative CT which can be utilized to assess regional quality of bone. The
simplest method available on most picture archiving and communications systems is
to simply measure a regions of interest and determine the mean Hounsfield units. This
method has excellent reliability throughout the skeleton and has moderate correlation
to DXA based on BMD. The prediction of outcome and correlation to mechanical strength
of fixation of a screw or implant is unknown.
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