학술논문

Advanced Analysis Techniques Improve Infant Bone and Body Composition Measures by Dual-Energy X-Ray Absorptiometry
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Bioengineering
Biomedical Imaging
Clinical Research
Musculoskeletal
Absorptiometry
Photon
Body Composition
Bone Density
Bone and Bones
Cross-Sectional Studies
Humans
Infant
Infant
Newborn
Reproducibility of Results
body composition
bone mineral density
precision
Human Movement and Sports Sciences
Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine
Pediatrics
Paediatrics
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate a novel technique designed to reduce the negative impact of motion artifacts in infant dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scans.Study designUsing cross-sectional data from a large multicenter study, we developed and tested advanced methods for infant scan analysis. Newborns (n = 750) received spine and whole-body DXA scans with up to 3 attempts to acquire a motion free scan. Precision of infant DXA was estimated from visits with multiple valid scans. Accuracy of regional reflection, fusion, and omission techniques was estimated by comparing modified scans to unmodified valid scans. The effectiveness of the acquisition and analysis protocol was represented by the reduction in rate of failure to acquire valid results from infant visits.ResultsFor infant whole-body DXA, arm reflection and all fusion techniques caused no significant changes to bone mineral content, bone mineral density, bone area, total mass, fat mass, lean mass, and percentage fat. Leg reflection and arm/leg dual-reflection caused significant changes to total mass, but the percentage change remained small. For infant spine DXA, fusion and omission caused no significant changes. Advanced analysis techniques reduced the failure rate of whole-body scanning from 20.8% to 9.3% and the failure rate of spine scanning from 8.9% to 2.4%.ConclusionsAdvanced analysis techniques significantly reduced the impact of motion artifacts on infant DXA scans. We suggest this protocol be used in future infant DXA research and clinical practice.