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Emerging role of high‐resolution imaging in the detection of renal osteodystrophy
Authors:Ashish K Sharma  Rosemary Masterson  Stephen G Holt  Nigel D Toussaint
Affiliation:1. Department of Nephrology, The Royal Melbourne Hospital, Victoria, Australia;2. Department of Medicine (RMH), The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Abstract:The term renal osteodystrophy refers to changes in bone morphology induced by chronic kidney disease (CKD) and represents the skeletal component of the entity ‘chronic kidney disease – mineral and bone disorder’. Changes in turnover, mineralization, mass and microarchitecture impair bone quality, compromising strength and increasing susceptibility to fractures. Fractures are more common in CKD compared with the general population and result in increased morbidity and mortality. Screening for fracture risk and management of renal osteodystrophy are hindered by the complex, and still only partially understood, pathophysiology and the inadequacy of currently available diagnostic methods. Bone densitometry and bone turnover markers, although potentially helpful, have significant limitations in patients with CKD, and the ‘gold standard’ test of bone biopsy is infrequently performed in routine clinical practice. However, recent advances in high‐resolution bone microarchitecture imaging may offer greater potential for quantification and assessment of bone structure and strength and, when used in conjunction with serum biomarkers, may allow non‐invasive testing for a diagnostic virtual bone biopsy.
Keywords:bone mineral density  chronic kidney disease –   mineral and bone disorder (CKD‐MBD)  fracture  high‐resolution magnetic resonance imaging  peripheral quantitative computed tomography  renal osteodystrophy
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