Heel ultrasound scan in detecting osteoporosis in low trauma fracture patients

Osteoporosis is the most common metabolic disease with significant impact on the morbidity and mortality of affected patients. Osteoporosis has a significant impact on the economy worldwide. The aim of this study was to find out whether heel ultrasound is as good as central bone densitometry scannin...

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Main Authors: Faiz R. Hashmi, Khaled O. Elfandi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Medical Publishing 2016-06-01
Series:Orthopedic Reviews
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/or/article/view/6357
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spelling doaj-80be6be61cd74a568869b4a3cec43a9c2021-05-02T15:05:28ZengOpen Medical PublishingOrthopedic Reviews2035-82372035-81642016-06-018210.4081/or.2016.63573355Heel ultrasound scan in detecting osteoporosis in low trauma fracture patientsFaiz R. Hashmi0Khaled O. Elfandi1Department of Trauma and Orthopedic Surgery, South Warwickshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, WarwickDepartment of General Medicine, Solihull HospitalOsteoporosis is the most common metabolic disease with significant impact on the morbidity and mortality of affected patients. Osteoporosis has a significant impact on the economy worldwide. The aim of this study was to find out whether heel ultrasound is as good as central bone densitometry scanning in diagnosing osteoporosis in patients who are at high risk of osteoporosis. This was a prospective study of patients comparing heel ultrasound to central bone densitometry scanning (dual X-ray absorptiometry, DEXA) in patients. The recruited patients attended for a DEXA scan of the left hip and lumbar spine. All subjects had an ultrasound of the left heel using the quantitative heel ultrasound machine. The results of DEXA scan were blinded from the results of ultrasound and vice versa. There were 59 patients who took part in the study, 12 men and 47 women. The mean age was 66 years (SD 11.9) and mean weight was 62.5 kg (SD 10.7). The sensitivity and specificity of the ultrasound heel test to predict osteoporosis were 53% (95%CI: 29-77) and 86% (95%CI: 75- 96) respectively. Specificity for predicting bone mineral density (BMD)-defined osteoporosis was high (86%), but sensitivity was low (53%). A heel ultrasound result in the osteoporotic range was highly predictive of BMD-defined osteoporosis. A positive ultrasound heel test in high risk patients is more useful in ruling in osteoporosis than a negative test to rule out osteoporosis.http://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/or/article/view/6357Osteoporosiscentral bone densityquantitative ultrasoundbone mineral density
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Faiz R. Hashmi
Khaled O. Elfandi
spellingShingle Faiz R. Hashmi
Khaled O. Elfandi
Heel ultrasound scan in detecting osteoporosis in low trauma fracture patients
Orthopedic Reviews
Osteoporosis
central bone density
quantitative ultrasound
bone mineral density
author_facet Faiz R. Hashmi
Khaled O. Elfandi
author_sort Faiz R. Hashmi
title Heel ultrasound scan in detecting osteoporosis in low trauma fracture patients
title_short Heel ultrasound scan in detecting osteoporosis in low trauma fracture patients
title_full Heel ultrasound scan in detecting osteoporosis in low trauma fracture patients
title_fullStr Heel ultrasound scan in detecting osteoporosis in low trauma fracture patients
title_full_unstemmed Heel ultrasound scan in detecting osteoporosis in low trauma fracture patients
title_sort heel ultrasound scan in detecting osteoporosis in low trauma fracture patients
publisher Open Medical Publishing
series Orthopedic Reviews
issn 2035-8237
2035-8164
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Osteoporosis is the most common metabolic disease with significant impact on the morbidity and mortality of affected patients. Osteoporosis has a significant impact on the economy worldwide. The aim of this study was to find out whether heel ultrasound is as good as central bone densitometry scanning in diagnosing osteoporosis in patients who are at high risk of osteoporosis. This was a prospective study of patients comparing heel ultrasound to central bone densitometry scanning (dual X-ray absorptiometry, DEXA) in patients. The recruited patients attended for a DEXA scan of the left hip and lumbar spine. All subjects had an ultrasound of the left heel using the quantitative heel ultrasound machine. The results of DEXA scan were blinded from the results of ultrasound and vice versa. There were 59 patients who took part in the study, 12 men and 47 women. The mean age was 66 years (SD 11.9) and mean weight was 62.5 kg (SD 10.7). The sensitivity and specificity of the ultrasound heel test to predict osteoporosis were 53% (95%CI: 29-77) and 86% (95%CI: 75- 96) respectively. Specificity for predicting bone mineral density (BMD)-defined osteoporosis was high (86%), but sensitivity was low (53%). A heel ultrasound result in the osteoporotic range was highly predictive of BMD-defined osteoporosis. A positive ultrasound heel test in high risk patients is more useful in ruling in osteoporosis than a negative test to rule out osteoporosis.
topic Osteoporosis
central bone density
quantitative ultrasound
bone mineral density
url http://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/or/article/view/6357
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