Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8624783 Bone 2018 31 Pages PDF
Abstract
Cortical widths <0.1 mm probably reflect zones where endosteal cortex has been trabecularised through expansion of an un-refilled sub-endosteal canal close to the periosteum. Persistent cortical defects occurring near the periosteal surface, where mechanical loading exerts its greatest stresses, are likely to result in extremes of localized concentrations of stress during a fall, unknown in young normal fallers. Such defects have the potential to help explain the excess of hip fractures among elderly women. Prevention of sub-periosteal tunnelling by osteoclasts might explain in part the additional benefits, beyond an increase in bone density, of treatments that reduce excessive bone resorption or else stimulate new bone formation on previously resorbed surfaces.
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