Bone
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Femoral neck axis length, neck width, and neck-shaft angle were measured on radiographs of right proximal femora from 64 cadavers (28 female, 36 male). Bone mineral density (BMD) was measured using dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) for various regions of interest, and quantitative computed tomography (QCT) was used to determine BMD and bone areas for cortical and trabecular bone at the trochanter and femoral neck. The strength of the femur was determined by a mechanical test simulating a fall on the greater trochanter, and the fracture type (cervical or trochanteric) was subsequently determined from radiographs. ⋯ The results demonstrated that DXA and QCT had a similar ability to predict femoral strength in vitro. Trochanteric BMD was the best DXA parameter, and cortical area (not cortical BMD) was the optimal QCT parameter. Geometric measurements of the proximal femur were only weakly correlated with the mechanical strength, and combinations of DXA, QCT, and geometric parameters resulted in only small increases in predictive power compared to the use of a single explanatory variable alone.