Asymmetry in CT Scan Measures of Thigh Muscle 2 Months After Hip Fracture: The Baltimore Hip Studies Article

Industry Collaboration

cited authors

  • Miller, Ram R., Eastlack, Marty, Hicks, Gregory E., Alley, Dawn E., Shardell, Michelle D., Orwig, Denise L., Goodpaster, Bret H., Chomentowski, Peter J., Hawkes, William G., Hochberg, Marc C., Ferrucci, Luigi, Magaziner, Jay

funding text

  • This research was supported by grants from the National Institute on Aging (K23AG027746, R37 AG09901, R01 AG029315, and P30 AG028747).

abstract

  • Hip fracture is an important problem for older adults with significant functional consequences. After hip fracture, reduced muscle loading can result in muscle atrophy. We compared thigh muscle characteristics in the fractured leg to those in the nonfractured leg in participants from the Baltimore Hip Studies 7th cohort using computed tomography scan imaging. At 2 months postfracture, a single 10mm axial computed tomography scan was obtained at the midthigh level in 43 participants (23 men, 20 women) with a mean age of 79.9 years (range: 65-96 years), and thigh muscle cross-sectional area, cross-sectional area of intermuscular adipose tissue, and mean radiologic attenuation were measured. Total thigh muscle cross-sectional area was less on the side of the fracture by 9.46cm(2) (95% CI: 5.97cm(2), 12.95cm(2)) while the cross-sectional area of intermuscular adipose tissue was greater by 2.97cm(2) (95% CI: 1.94cm(2), 4.01cm(2)) on the fractured side. Mean muscle attenuation was lower on the side of the fracture by 3.66 Hounsfield Units (95% CI: 2.98 Hounsfield Units, 4.34 Hounsfield Units). The observed asymmetry is consistent with the effect of disuse and inflammation in the affected limb along with training effects in the unaffected limb due to the favoring of this leg with ambulation during the postfracture period.

Publication Date

  • October 1, 2015

webpage

category

start page

  • 1276

end page

  • 1280

volume

  • 70

issue

  • 10

WoS Citations

  • 1

WoS References

  • 31