Affiliation:
1. Musculoskeletal Adaptations to Aging and eXercise (MAAX) Lab, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Oklahoma; and
2. Oklahoma City Thunder Professional Basketball Club, Human and Player Performance, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Abstract
Abstract
Redinger, AL, Russell, JL, Allen, SMF, and Baker, BS. Height restrictions for dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry: what are our options for body composition and bone health precision? J Strength Cond Res 38(7): e359–e365, 2024—Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) is commonly used for testing athlete's body composition, but many athletes are too tall. The first aim was to assess the viability of combining upper- and lower-body regions of interest (ROI), creating a combined scan for tall athletes who do not fit on the table and second, to provide practical solutions to DXA users who routinely scan tall athletes. Sixty subjects (34.8 ± 11.9 years; 171 ± 9 cm) completed 2 total-body DXA scans for baseline precision testing, using GE Lunar Prodigy (LP) or Hologic Horizon A (HA) models. Next, an upper body ROI from the skull to the distal femoral condyles was combined with a flipped scan (feet-to-head) ROI encompassing the proximal tibial plateau to the distal foot. Soft and bone tissue coefficient of variance (CV%) were calculated between the baseline scans and for the newly combined ROI scan. The combined ROI scan added 0.25–0.63% and 0.01–4.35% error rates for the LP and HA, respectively. An exploratory assessment of a GE Lunar iDXA demonstrated results similar to the HA with 4%+ error. The combined ROI scan is a user-friendly and precise method for older LP systems adding less than 1% error; however, newer DXA systems cannot use the stitched scan technique. Coaches and practitioners who use newer DXAs must prioritize consistently using the same boney landmarks (head, jaw, or feet) and ROI heights to provide precise longitudinal assessments of tall athletes' bone and body composition, until larger DXA tables become available.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Reference25 articles.
1. Precision assessment and radiation safety for dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry: Position paper of the international society for clinical Densitometry;Baim;J Clin Densitom,2005
2. Body fat assessment techniques: Is there a place for 3D body scanners?;Baker;J Phys Educ Sport,2021
3. Skeletal health and associated injury risk in collegiate female rowers;Baker;J Strength Cond Res,2022
4. Sex differences in bone density, geometry, and bone strength of competitive soccer players;Baker;J Musculoskelet Neuronal Interact,2020
5. DXA2: An automated program for extraction of Dual-Energy X-Ray Absorptiometry data;Baker;J Clin Densitom,2021