Understanding Bone Mineral Density (BMD) Test Results

When you have a bone mineral density test, it compares your bone density to a “young normal” healthy 30-year-old adult with peak bone density (also called peak bone mass). Peak bone density is the point at which a person has the greatest amount of bone that she or he will ever have.


You will get the result of your BMD test in a special number called a T-score. It stands for “standard deviations” or “SD.” It indicates how much your bone density is above or below normal.

Healthcare providers use the T-score to diagnose osteoporosis. If more than one bone is tested, they use the lowest T-score to make a diagnosis of osteoporosis. The World Health Organization (WHO) has defined the T-scores and what they mean.



What your T-score means:

  • A T-score between +1 and -1 is normal bone density. Examples are 0.8, 0.2 and -0.5.

  • A T-score between -1 and -2.5 indicates low bone density or osteopenia. Examples are T-scores of -1.2, -1.6 and -2.1.

  • A T-score of -2.5 or lower is a diagnosis of osteoporosis. Examples are T-scores of -2.8, -3.3 and -3.9.
The lower a person’s T-score, the lower the bone density. A T-score of -1.0 is lower than a T-score of 0.5; a T-score of -2.0 is lower than a T-score of -1.5; and a T-score of -3.5 is lower than a T-score of -3.0.


For most BMD tests, 1 SD difference in a T-score equals a 10-15 percent decrease in bone density. For example, a person with a T-score of -2.5 has a 10-15 percent lower BMD than a person with a T-score of -1.5.

Your BMD test result also includes a Z-score that compares your bone density to what is normal in someone your age and body size. Healthcare providers do not use Z-scores to diagnose osteoporosis in postmenopausal women and men age 50 or older. Among older adults low bone mineral density is common, so Z-scores can be misleading. An older person might have a “normal” Z-score but still be at high risk for breaking a bone.

Most experts recommend using Z-scores rather than T-scores for younger men, premenopausal women and children. However, healthcare providers often use T-scores for peri-menopausal women. A Z-score above -2.0 is normal according to the International Society for Clinical Densitometry (ISCD). A diagnosis of osteoporosis in younger men, premenopausal women and children should not be based on a BMD test result alone. The National Osteoporosis Foundation does not recommend routine BMD testing in children, adolescents, healthy young men or premenopausal women.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

You should cite references when you copy another's work: http://www.nof.org/osteoporosis/bmdtest.htm#test_results

Balanced Health & Beauty said...

This information was not copied from the website mentioned above. However,Well, let's see... you can get this information from a number of sources...

http://ag.arizona.edu/maricopa/fcs/bb/BMD.htm

http://ag.arizona.edu/maricopa/fcs/bb/BMD.htm

http://lourdes.com/Patient_Education/Womens_Health/default.aspx?pageid=P09119

http://www.americanbonehealth.org/what-you-should-know/about-t-scores

http://www.greenhosp.org/healthlibrary/index.asp?pageid=P09500

and yes... http://www.nof.org/osteoporosis/bmdtest.htm

and about a hundred other sources... but ultimately the information was captured from the World Health Organization
http://www.who.int/en/

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