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British Journal of Radiology (1996) 69, 532-538
© 1996 British Institute of Radiology
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The British Journal of Radiology, Vol 69, Issue 822 532-538, Copyright © 1996 by British Institute of Radiology


ARTICLES

A portable system for measuring bone mineral density in the pre-term neonatal forearm

JG Truscott, R Milner, PC Holland, C Wood and MA Smith
Centre for Bone and Body Composition Research, University of Leeds, Wellcome Wing.

Current systems used to measure bone mineral content (BMC) in the neonate have the major drawback that the child must be well enough to be moved to the scanner. Consequently, low birth weight pre-term neonates, a group at particular risk of mineral compromise, cannot be measured. This paper describes a portable neonatal bone mineral device capable of measuring bone mineral in the incubator. It uses a radiation sensitive, charge coupled device (CCD) to acquire a bone mineral image enabling bone mineral to be measured at various sites. It measures bone mineral density (BMD) with a precision of 5.5 mg cm-2 in vivo, reduced to 7.5 mg cm-2 when repositioning between scans is taken into account. The procedure takes under 5 min with an image acquisition time of 30 s and an absorbed radiation dose to skin of 6 microSv. Calibration has been undertaken with aluminium foils of differing thickness to confirm the linearity of the system throughout the intended measurement range. A regression line fitted to the data demonstrated linearity and correlation between BMD and aluminium thickness with r = 0.99 (p < 0.0001). Preliminary measurements on pre-term neonates show values of BMD ranging from 43 to 115 mg cm-2 in babies aged 23-41 weeks post-conception. These figures are within the linear range of the system.





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