Supine vs Decubitus Lateral Patient Positioning in Vertebral Fracture Assessment |
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Authors: | Margaret Anne Paggiosi Judith Finigan Nicola Peel Richard Eastell Lynne Ferrar |
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Affiliation: | 1. Bone Biology Division, Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Sydney, Australia;2. St Vincent''s Clinical School, UNSW Medicine, UNSW Australia, Sydney, Australia;3. Centre for Health Technology, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia;1. Stem Cell Research Center, Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tabriz, Iran;2. Immunology Research Center, Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tabriz, Iran;3. Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Babol University of Medical Sciences, Babol, Iran;4. Social Determinant of Health Research Center, Health Research Institute, Babol University of Medical Sciences, Babol, Iran;5. Department of Radiology, Babol University of Medical Sciences, Babol, Iran |
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Abstract: | In vertebral fracture assessment (VFA), lateral scans are obtained with the patient positioned supine (C-arm densitometers) or lateral decubitus (fixed-arm densitometers). We aimed to determine the impact of positioning on image quality and fracture definition. We performed supine and decubitus lateral VFA in 50 postmenopausal women and used the algorithm-based qualitative method to identify vertebral fractures. We compared the 2 techniques for the identification of fractures (kappa analysis) and compared the numbers of unreadable vertebrae (indiscernible endplates) and vertebrae that were projected obliquely (Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed-rank test). The kappa score for agreement between the VFA techniques (to identify women with vertebral fractures) was 0.84 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.68–0.99), and for agreement with fracture assessments made from radiographs, kappa was 0.76 (95% CI: 0.57–0.94) for both supine and decubitus lateral VFA. There were more unreadable vertebrae with supine lateral (48 vertebrae in supine lateral compared with 14 in decubitus lateral; p = 0.001), but oblique projection was less common (93 vertebrae compared with 145 in decubitus lateral; p = 0.002). We conclude that there were significantly different projection effects with supine and decubitus lateral VFA, but these differences did not influence the identification of vertebral fractures in our study sample. |
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