PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Factors associated with bone thickness: Comparison of the cranium and humerus.

  • Shimpei Goto,
  • Keiichi Kataoka,
  • Mutsumi Isa,
  • Kenji Nakamori,
  • Makoto Yoshida,
  • Sadayuki Murayama,
  • Akira Arasaki,
  • Hajime Ishida,
  • Ryosuke Kimura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0283636
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 3
p. e0283636

Abstract

Read online

Cortical bone thickness is important for the mechanical function of bone. Ontogeny, aging, sex, body size, hormone levels, diet, behavior, and genetics potentially cause variations in postcranial cortical robusticity. However, the factors associated with cranial cortical robusticity remain poorly understood. Few studies have examined cortical robusticity in both cranial and postcranial bones jointly. In the present study, we used computed tomography (CT) images to measure cortical bone thicknesses in the cranial vault and humeral diaphysis. This study clearly showed that females have a greater cranial vault thickness and greater age-related increase in cranial vault thickness than males. We found an age-related increase in the full thickness of the temporal cranial vault and the width of the humeral diaphysis, as well as an age-related decrease in the cortical thickness of the frontal cranial vault and the cortical thickness of the humeral diaphysis, suggesting that the mechanisms of bone modeling in cranial and long bones are similar. A positive correlation between cortical indices in the cranial vault and humeral diaphysis also suggested that common factors affect cortical robusticity. We also examined the association of polymorphisms in the WNT16 and TNFSF11 genes with bone thickness. However, no significant associations were observed. The present study provides fundamental knowledge about similarities and differences in the mechanisms of bone modeling between cranial and postcranial bones.