Complete cross-sections from the femoral midshaft of 180 individuals
of known height and weight, aged
21–97 y, from a modern Australian population were examined using
automatic video image analysis to
quantify total subperiosteal porosity (TSPP). More specifically, the aim
was
to investigate whether age
changes were similar in both sexes in (1) total subperiosteal area (TSPA),
cortical area (CA) and medullary
area (MA), (2) intracortical porosity (ICP), and (3) the respective contributions
to TSPP made by MA and
intracortical void area (ICVA). Our findings indicated that both sexes
showed a
significantly greater height
normalised TSPA in the 70s as compared with the 20s. Males had consistently
larger bones with a greater
height normalised CA. In both sexes CA showed a tendency to increase till
the
7th decade and then to
decline, more so in females. MA approximately trebled in females and doubled
in males over the age range
studied. Although ICP also increased, from 4–6% in young adults to
over
9% in the elderly, it showed a
significant difference between the sexes only in the 3rd decade, being
greater
in males at this stage. By
contrast, TSPP became significantly greater in females (from that recorded
in
the 3rd decade) by the time
they reached the 50s, while in males this did not occur till the 80s. It
increased from ∼25% in young adults
of both sexes to ∼50% in females and ∼37% in males in their 80s.
However,
in the elderly there was
great variability in both sexes in the appearance of bones from individuals
of similar chronological age.
Some bones differed little from those in younger subjects, others showed
greatly increased ICP, still others
displayed reduced cortical widths with low ICP. The femoral midshaft resembles
other skeletal sites in that
age changes in TSPP are more marked in females than males.