Litcius/Paper detail

Formula for the Cross-Sectional Area of the Muscles of the Third Lumbar Vertebra Level from the Twelfth Thoracic Vertebra Level Slice on Computed Tomography

Yuria Ishida, Keisuke Maeda, Yosuke Yamanaka, Remi Matsuyama, Ryoko Kato, Makoto Yamaguchi, Tomoyuki Nonogaki, Akio Shimizu, Junko Ueshima, Kenta Murotani, Naoharu Mori

2020Geriatrics13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate a means by which to reflect muscle mass using chest computed tomography (CT). A cross-sectional study was conducted with patients aged ≥ 65 years having abdominal and chest CT scans. The formula to predict third lumbar vertebra (L3) cross-sectional area (CSA) of the muscles from the erector muscles of the spine at the twelfth thoracic vertebra (Th12) level slice on CT was created using the five-fold cross-validation method. Correlation between predicted L3 CSA and measured L3 CSA of the muscles was assessed by intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) and correlation coefficients (r) in the data of the development, and predictability was examined with accuracy and F-values in the validation study. The development study included 161 patients. The developed formula was as follows: −1006.38 + 16.29 × age [years] + 1161.80 × sex (if female, 0; if male, 1) + 55.91 × body weight [kg] + 2.22 × CSA of the erector muscles at Th12 [mm2]. The formula demonstrated strong concordance and correlation (ICC = 0.849 [0.800–0.887] and r = 0.858 [0.811–0.894]). The validation study included 34 patients. The accuracy and F-value between predicted CSA and measured CSA were high (accuracy = 0.889–0.944, F-value = 0.931–0.968). We developed a formula predicting CSA at L3 using Th12 CT slice. This formula could be used to assess decreased muscle mass even with chest CT alone.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineIntraclass correlationConcordanceLumbar vertebraeVertebraNuclear medicineThoracic vertebraeComputed tomographyLumbarRadiologyTomographyAnatomyInternal medicineClinical psychologyPsychometricsScoliosis diagnosis and treatmentHip and Femur FracturesNutrition and Health in Aging