The decision to institute prophylaxis in women with menopausal
osteopenia is hampered by the absence of quantitative criteria for
appraising the risk of fracture in the individual. We have developed
standards for assessing the risk of fracture by relating the prevalence of
atraumatic vertebral compression fractures to bone density in sixty-five
menopausal women, forty-nine to ninety-two years old. To define the upper
limit of the spectrum of bone density, we also studied thirty-one young
women, seventeen to twenty-two years old. The density of trabecular bone in
a vertebral body was determined by quantitative computed tomography and
expressed in terms of milligrams per milliliter of dipotassium hydrogen
phosphate. Twenty-five of the menopausal women exhibited at least one
fracture (range, one to six fractures), and forty had no fracture. The bone
density ranged from -9 to sixty-nine milligrams per milliliter in those
with fractures and from twelve to 122 milligrams per milliliter in those
without a fracture. The densities in the young women averaged 173
milligrams per milliliter and ranged from ninety-five to 248 milligrams per
milliliter. The percentage of subjects with fractures increased as the bone
density decreased. It was zero per cent in women with a density of seventy
milligrams per milliliter or more, 38 per cent in women with a density
between fifty and less than seventy milligrams per milliliter, 71 per cent
in those with a density between thirty and less than fifty milligrams per
milliliter, and 82 per cent in women with a density of less than thirty
milligrams per milliliter.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)