Thickness of lamellae in normal human iliac trabecular bone

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Thickness of lamellae in normal human iliac trabecular bone. / Kragstrup, J; Melsen, F; Mosekilde, L.

In: Bone, Vol. 4, No. 5, 1983, p. 291-5.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kragstrup, J, Melsen, F & Mosekilde, L 1983, 'Thickness of lamellae in normal human iliac trabecular bone', Bone, vol. 4, no. 5, pp. 291-5. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0221-8747(83)80002-2

APA

Kragstrup, J., Melsen, F., & Mosekilde, L. (1983). Thickness of lamellae in normal human iliac trabecular bone. Bone, 4(5), 291-5. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0221-8747(83)80002-2

Vancouver

Kragstrup J, Melsen F, Mosekilde L. Thickness of lamellae in normal human iliac trabecular bone. Bone. 1983;4(5):291-5. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0221-8747(83)80002-2

Author

Kragstrup, J ; Melsen, F ; Mosekilde, L. / Thickness of lamellae in normal human iliac trabecular bone. In: Bone. 1983 ; Vol. 4, No. 5. pp. 291-5.

Bibtex

@article{33373c669eea463cb4297b5715d494bf,
title = "Thickness of lamellae in normal human iliac trabecular bone",
abstract = "The three-dimensional (3-D) thickness of lamellae in normal trabecular bone was estimated by means of a stereologic transformation of the apparent width measured on 7 mm stained sections of undecalcified iliac bone from 65 nondiseased individuals aged 16--90 years. The average 3-D thickness of double lamellae (one bright and one dark) was 6.4 mm with a coefficient of variation between individuals of approximately 5%. Among the 32 males, the thickness was unchanged with age, while double lamellar thickness increased with age in the females [thickness (mm) = 5.980 (mm) ;.008 (mm/year) x age (yr). Intra-individual distributions of the thickness of double lamellae resembled normal distributions and had a median coefficient of variation of 23%. Within the trabecular osteons, no correlation between lamellar number and thickness was demonstrated, and no difference in thickness was found between mineralized and nonmineralized lamellae. Redeterminations showed no intra-observer bias in the estimation of the mean double lamellar thickness. The low variance between individuals indicated that the lamellar thickness is important for some essential biologic function, most likely the mechanical strength of trabecular bone. It may, therefore, be a useful variable to study in metabolic bone diseases. Furthermore, counting lamellae may be a simple way of estimating the 3-D thickness of remodeling sites in trabecular bone.",
keywords = "Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aging, Bone and Bones/metabolism, Female, Humans, Ilium/anatomy & histology, Male, Middle Aged, Minerals/metabolism, Sex Factors",
author = "J Kragstrup and F Melsen and L Mosekilde",
year = "1983",
doi = "10.1016/s0221-8747(83)80002-2",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
pages = "291--5",
journal = "Bone",
issn = "8756-3282",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Thickness of lamellae in normal human iliac trabecular bone

AU - Kragstrup, J

AU - Melsen, F

AU - Mosekilde, L

PY - 1983

Y1 - 1983

N2 - The three-dimensional (3-D) thickness of lamellae in normal trabecular bone was estimated by means of a stereologic transformation of the apparent width measured on 7 mm stained sections of undecalcified iliac bone from 65 nondiseased individuals aged 16--90 years. The average 3-D thickness of double lamellae (one bright and one dark) was 6.4 mm with a coefficient of variation between individuals of approximately 5%. Among the 32 males, the thickness was unchanged with age, while double lamellar thickness increased with age in the females [thickness (mm) = 5.980 (mm) ;.008 (mm/year) x age (yr). Intra-individual distributions of the thickness of double lamellae resembled normal distributions and had a median coefficient of variation of 23%. Within the trabecular osteons, no correlation between lamellar number and thickness was demonstrated, and no difference in thickness was found between mineralized and nonmineralized lamellae. Redeterminations showed no intra-observer bias in the estimation of the mean double lamellar thickness. The low variance between individuals indicated that the lamellar thickness is important for some essential biologic function, most likely the mechanical strength of trabecular bone. It may, therefore, be a useful variable to study in metabolic bone diseases. Furthermore, counting lamellae may be a simple way of estimating the 3-D thickness of remodeling sites in trabecular bone.

AB - The three-dimensional (3-D) thickness of lamellae in normal trabecular bone was estimated by means of a stereologic transformation of the apparent width measured on 7 mm stained sections of undecalcified iliac bone from 65 nondiseased individuals aged 16--90 years. The average 3-D thickness of double lamellae (one bright and one dark) was 6.4 mm with a coefficient of variation between individuals of approximately 5%. Among the 32 males, the thickness was unchanged with age, while double lamellar thickness increased with age in the females [thickness (mm) = 5.980 (mm) ;.008 (mm/year) x age (yr). Intra-individual distributions of the thickness of double lamellae resembled normal distributions and had a median coefficient of variation of 23%. Within the trabecular osteons, no correlation between lamellar number and thickness was demonstrated, and no difference in thickness was found between mineralized and nonmineralized lamellae. Redeterminations showed no intra-observer bias in the estimation of the mean double lamellar thickness. The low variance between individuals indicated that the lamellar thickness is important for some essential biologic function, most likely the mechanical strength of trabecular bone. It may, therefore, be a useful variable to study in metabolic bone diseases. Furthermore, counting lamellae may be a simple way of estimating the 3-D thickness of remodeling sites in trabecular bone.

KW - Adolescent

KW - Adult

KW - Aged

KW - Aging

KW - Bone and Bones/metabolism

KW - Female

KW - Humans

KW - Ilium/anatomy & histology

KW - Male

KW - Middle Aged

KW - Minerals/metabolism

KW - Sex Factors

U2 - 10.1016/s0221-8747(83)80002-2

DO - 10.1016/s0221-8747(83)80002-2

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 6621354

VL - 4

SP - 291

EP - 295

JO - Bone

JF - Bone

SN - 8756-3282

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 324195734