Bone densitometry
Bone densitometry | |
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Term | Bone densitometry |
Short definition | Bone densitometry - procedure that measures the amount of calcium and other minerals in a bone by passing X-rays through the bone at two different energy levels. A bone densitometry shows the strength and thickness of a bone and is usually done on the lower spine, hip, forearm, wrist, fingers and heel. |
Type | Cancer terms |
Specialty | Oncology |
Language | English |
Source | NCI |
Comments |
Bone densitometry - procedure that measures the amount of calcium and other minerals in a bone by passing X-rays through the bone at two different energy levels. A bone densitometry shows the strength and thickness of a bone and is usually done on the lower spine, hip, forearm, wrist, fingers and heel. It is used to diagnose osteoporosis (a disease with reduced bone density), to see how well osteoporosis treatments are working and to predict how likely bones are to break. A bone densitometry also measures fat and muscle composition in specific parts of the body, such as the arms, legs, and pelvis. Also referred to as a BMD scan, bone mineral density scan, DEXA scan, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, and DXA
External links
- Medical encyclopedia article on Bone densitometry
- Wikipedia's article - Bone densitometry
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