13 results on '"Mayhew PM"'
Search Results
2. MID FEMORAL NECK CORTICAL THICKNESS AND STABILITY CHANGES WITH AGE
- Author
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Mayhew, PM, Loveridge, N, Thomas, DL, Clement, JG, and Reeve, J
- Published
- 2016
3. Regional Differences in Femoral Neck Cortical Thickness Determine Hip Fragility: An in-Vivo CT Study
- Author
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Mayhew, PM, Rose, CM, Brown, K, Kaptoge, SK, Loveridge, N, Reeve, J, and Poole, KES
- Published
- 2016
4. Ageing effects on femoral neck trabecular bone: Role in hip fracture
- Author
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Thomas, CD, Mayhew, PM, Clement, JG, Loveridge, N, Burgoyne, CJ, and Reeve, J
- Published
- 2016
5. The contribution of femoral neck trabecular bone to hip fracture prevention
- Author
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Reeve, J, D Thomas, C, Mayhew, PM, Loveridge, N, Clement, JG, and Burgoyne, CJ
- Published
- 2016
6. Breaking an Egg-Shell; Regional Thinning of the Femoral Neck Cortex with Advancing Age Predisposes to Hip Fracture
- Author
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Poole, KES, Mayhew, PM, Rose, CM, Brown, K, Kaptoge, SK, Bearcroft, P, Loveridge, N, and Reeve, J
- Published
- 2016
7. Relation between age, femoral neck cortical stability, and hip fracture risk.
- Author
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Mayhew PM, Thomas CD, Clement JG, Loveridge N, Beck TJ, Bonfield W, Burgoyne CJ, Reeve J, Mayhew, Paul M, Thomas, C David, Clement, John G, Loveridge, Nigel, Beck, Thomas J, Bonfield, William, Burgoyne, Chris J, and Reeve, Jonathan
- Abstract
Background: Hip fracture risk rises 100 to 1000-fold over 60 years of ageing. Loss of resistance to bending is not a major feature of normal ageing of the femoral neck. Another cause of fragility is local buckling or elastic instability. Bones adapt to their local experience of mechanical loading. The suggestion that bipedalism allows thinning of the underloaded superolateral femoral neck cortex arises from the failure of walking to transmit much mechanical load to this region. We aimed to measure whether elastic instability increases greatly with age since it might trigger hip fracture in a sideways fall.Methods: We measured with computed tomography the distribution of bone in the mid-femoral neck of 77 proximal femurs from people who died suddenly aged 20-95 years. We then calculated the critical stress, from the geometric properties and density of the cortical zone most highly loaded in a sideways fall, as a threshold for elastic instability.Findings: With normal ageing, this thin cortical zone in the upper femoral neck became substantially thinner. Relative to mean values at age 60 years, female cortical thickness declined by 6.4% (SD 1.1) per decade (p<0.0001), and critical stress by 13.2% (4.3) per decade (p=0.004) in the superoposterior octant compressed most in a sideways fall. Similar, but significantly smaller, effects were evident in men (p=0.004). This thinning compromised the capacity of the femur to absorb energy independently of osteoporosis. Patients with hip fracture had further reduced stability.Interpretation: As women age, hip fragility increases because underloading of the superolateral cortex leads to atrophic thinning. Because walking does not sufficiently load the upper femoral neck, the fragile zones in healthy bones may need strengthening, for example with more well targeted exercise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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8. Cortical stability of the femoral neck and hip fracture risk.
- Author
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Zebaze RMD, Seeman E, Bouxsein ML, Fajardo RJ, Reeve J, Mayhew PM, Thomas CD, Loveridge N, Burgoyne CJ, Sugiyama T, and Taguchi T
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Cortical thickness mapping to identify focal osteoporosis in patients with hip fracture.
- Author
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Poole KE, Treece GM, Mayhew PM, Vaculík J, Dungl P, Horák M, Štěpán JJ, and Gee AH
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Case-Control Studies, Czech Republic, Densitometry methods, Female, Femoral Neck Fractures etiology, Humans, Osteoporosis complications, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Bone Density physiology, Femoral Neck Fractures diagnostic imaging, Femur Neck diagnostic imaging, Osteoporosis diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Individuals with osteoporosis are predisposed to hip fracture during trips, stumbles or falls, but half of all hip fractures occur in those without generalised osteoporosis. By analysing ordinary clinical CT scans using a novel cortical thickness mapping technique, we discovered patches of markedly thinner bone at fracture-prone regions in the femurs of women with acute hip fracture compared with controls., Methods: We analysed CT scans from 75 female volunteers with acute fracture and 75 age- and sex-matched controls. We classified the fracture location as femoral neck or trochanteric before creating bone thickness maps of the outer 'cortical' shell of the intact contra-lateral hip. After registration of each bone to an average femur shape and statistical parametric mapping, we were able to visualise and quantify statistically significant foci of thinner cortical bone associated with each fracture type, assuming good symmetry of bone structure between the intact and fractured hip. The technique allowed us to pinpoint systematic differences and display the results on a 3D average femur shape model., Findings: The cortex was generally thinner in femoral neck fracture cases than controls. More striking were several discrete patches of statistically significant thinner bone of up to 30%, which coincided with common sites of fracture initiation (femoral neck or trochanteric)., Interpretation: Femoral neck fracture patients had a thumbnail-sized patch of focal osteoporosis at the upper head-neck junction. This region coincided with a weak part of the femur, prone to both spontaneous 'tensile' fractures of the femoral neck, and as a site of crack initiation when falling sideways. Current hip fracture prevention strategies are based on case finding: they involve clinical risk factor estimation to determine the need for single-plane bone density measurement within a standard region of interest (ROI) of the femoral neck. The precise sites of focal osteoporosis that we have identified are overlooked by current 2D bone densitometry methods.
- Published
- 2012
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10. Targeted regeneration of bone in the osteoporotic human femur.
- Author
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Poole KE, Treece GM, Ridgway GR, Mayhew PM, Borggrefe J, and Gee AH
- Subjects
- Aged, Bone Density, Diagnostic Imaging standards, Female, Femur pathology, Humans, Middle Aged, Osteoporosis diagnosis, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Bone Regeneration drug effects, Bone Regeneration physiology, Diagnostic Imaging methods, Femur drug effects, Osteoporosis pathology, Osteoporosis therapy, Weight-Bearing physiology
- Abstract
We have recently developed image processing techniques for measuring the cortical thicknesses of skeletal structures in vivo, with resolution surpassing that of the underlying computed tomography system. The resulting thickness maps can be analysed across cohorts by statistical parametric mapping. Applying these methods to the proximal femurs of osteoporotic women, we discover targeted and apparently synergistic effects of pharmaceutical osteoporosis therapy and habitual mechanical load in enhancing bone thickness.
- Published
- 2011
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- View/download PDF
11. High resolution cortical bone thickness measurement from clinical CT data.
- Author
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Treece GM, Gee AH, Mayhew PM, and Poole KE
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Algorithms, Computer Simulation, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Biological, Pattern Recognition, Automated methods, Radiographic Image Enhancement methods, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Bone Density, Femoral Fractures diagnostic imaging, Femur diagnostic imaging, Femur injuries, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods, Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods
- Abstract
The distribution of cortical bone in the proximal femur is believed to be a critical component in determining fracture resistance. Current CT technology is limited in its ability to measure cortical thickness, especially in the sub-millimetre range which lies within the point spread function of today's clinical scanners. In this paper, we present a novel technique that is capable of producing unbiased thickness estimates down to 0.3mm. The technique relies on a mathematical model of the anatomy and the imaging system, which is fitted to the data at a large number of sites around the proximal femur, producing around 17,000 independent thickness estimates per specimen. In a series of experiments on 16 cadaveric femurs, estimation errors were measured as -0.01+/-0.58mm (mean+/-1std.dev.) for cortical thicknesses in the range 0.3-4mm. This compares with 0.25+/-0.69mm for simple thresholding and 0.90+/-0.92mm for a variant of the 50% relative threshold method. In the clinically relevant sub-millimetre range, thresholding increasingly fails to detect the cortex at all, whereas the new technique continues to perform well. The many cortical thickness estimates can be displayed as a colour map painted onto the femoral surface. Computation of the surfaces and colour maps is largely automatic, requiring around 15min on a modest laptop computer., (Copyright (c) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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12. Changing structure of the femoral neck across the adult female lifespan.
- Author
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Poole KE, Mayhew PM, Rose CM, Brown JK, Bearcroft PJ, Loveridge N, and Reeve J
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Bone Density, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Young Adult, Femur Neck anatomy & histology, Femur Neck diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
The anatomic distribution of cortical and cancellous bone in the femoral neck may be critical in determining resistance to fracture. We investigated the effects of aging on femoral neck bone in women. In this cross-sectional study, we used clinical multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) of the hips to investigate aging effects in 100 female volunteers aged 20 to 90 years. We developed a clinically efficient protocol to measure cortical thickness (C.Th) and cortical, trabecular, and integral bone mineral density (CtBMD, TrBMD, and iBMD in mg/cm(3)) in anatomic quadrants of the femoral neck. We used a nested ANOVA to evaluate their associations with height, weight, location in the femoral neck, and age of the subject. Age was the principal determinant of both cortical thickness and BMD. Age had significantly different effects within the anatomic quadrants; compared with young women, elderly subjects had relative preservation of the inferoanterior (IA) quadrant but strikingly reduced C.Th and BMD superiorly. A model including height, weight, and region of interest (and their interactions) explained 83% of the measurement variance (p < .0001). There were marked C.Th and BMD differences between age 25 and age 85 in the already thin superior quadrants. At 25 years the predicted C.Th of the superoposterior quadrant was 1.63 mm, whereas at 85 years it was 0.33 mm [-1.33 mm, 95% confidence interval (CI) of difference over 60 years -1.69 to -0.95]. By contrast, at 25 years mean C.Th of the IA quadrant was 3.9 mm, whereas at 85 years it was 3.3 mm (-0.6 mm, 95% CI -0.83 to -0.10). CtBMD of the IA region was equivalent at 25 and 85 years. In conclusion, elderly women had relative preservation of IA femoral neck bone over seven decades compared with young women but markedly lower C.Th and BMD in the other three quadrants. The IA quadrant transmits mechanical load from walking. Mechanical theory and laboratory tests on cadaveric femurs suggest that localized bone loss may increase the risk of fracture in elderly fallers. It remains to be determined whether this MDCT technique can provide better prediction of hip fracture than conventional clinical dual X-ray absorptiometry (DXA)., (Copyright 2010 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Femoral neck trabecular bone: loss with aging and role in preventing fracture.
- Author
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Thomas CD, Mayhew PM, Power J, Poole KE, Loveridge N, Clement JG, Burgoyne CJ, and Reeve J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Biopsy, Bone Density physiology, Case-Control Studies, Female, Femoral Neck Fractures pathology, Femoral Neck Fractures physiopathology, Femur Neck physiopathology, Hip Fractures pathology, Hip Fractures physiopathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Stress, Mechanical, Aging pathology, Femoral Neck Fractures prevention & control, Femur Neck pathology
- Abstract
Hip fracture risk rises 100- to 1000-fold over six decades of age, but only a minor part of this increase is explained by declining BMD. A potentially independent cause of fragility is cortical thinning predisposing to local crushing, in which bone tissue's material disintegrates at the microscopic level when compressed beyond its capacity to maintain integrity. Elastic instability or buckling of a much thinned cortex might alternatively occur under compression. In a buckle, the cortex moves approximately at right angles to the direction of load, thereby distorting its microstructure, eventually to the point of disintegration. By resisting buckling movement, trabecular buttressing would protect the femoral neck cortex against this type of failure but not against crushing. We quantified the effect of aging on trabecular BMD in the femoral neck and assessed its contribution to cortical elastic stability, which determines resistance to buckling. Using CT, we measured ex vivo the distribution of bone in the midfemoral necks of 35 female and 33 male proximal femurs from cases of sudden death in those 20-95 yr of age. We calculated the critical stress sigma(cr), at which the cortex was predicted to buckle locally, from the geometric properties and density of the cortical zone most highly loaded in a sideways fall. Using long-established engineering principles, we estimated the amount by which stability or buckling resistance was increased by the trabecular bone supporting the most stressed cortical sector in each femoral neck. We repeated these measurements and calculations in an age- and sex-matched series of femoral necks donated by women who had suffered intracapsular hip fracture and controls, using histological measurements of cortical thickness to improve accuracy. With normal aging, trabecular BMD declined asymmetrically, fastest in the supero-lateral one-half (in antero-posterior projection) of the trabecular compartment. When viewed axially with respect to the femoral neck, the most rapid loss of trabecular bone occurred in the posterior part of this region (supero-posterior [S-P]), amounting to a 42% reduction in women (34% in men) over five decades of adult age. Because local cortical bone thickness declined comparably, age had no significant effect on the relative contributions of cortical and trabecular bone to elastic stability, and trabecular bone was calculated to contribute 40% (in men) and 43% (in women) to the S-P cortex of its overall elastic stability. Hip fracture cases had reduced elastic stability compared with age-matched controls, with a median reduction of 49% or 37%, depending on whether thickness was measured histologically or by CT (pQCT; p < 0.002 for both). This effect was because of reduced cortical thickness and density. Trabecular BMD was similar in hip fracture cases and controls. The capacity of the femur to resist fracture in a sideways fall becomes compromised with normal aging because cortical thickness and trabecular BMD in the most compressed part of the femoral neck both decline substantially. This decline is relatively more rapid than that of femoral neck areal BMD. If elastic instability rather than cortical crushing initiates the fracture event, interventions that increase trabecular bone in the proximal femur have great potential to reduce fracture risk because the gradient defining the increase in elastic stability with increasing trabecular BMD is steep, and most hip fracture cases have sufficient trabecular bone for anabolic therapies to build on.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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