I have had a compression fracture of the third and fourth lumbar vertebrae for three or four years, and now the trabecular deformation is blurred.

It depends on your age and sex, but one thing is certain. Blurred trabecular bone is generally more common in osteoporosis and the like, but it is rare in osteopathy (bone diseases with some bones destroyed), and it depends on whether you have other symptoms now; If your compression fracture is not caused by trauma, then the fuzziness of trabecular deformation may be directly related to it, that is, the compression fracture is caused by trabecular deformation, that is, the loss or malabsorption of calcium. There are many reasons for this phenomenon, such as female menopause estrogen weakening and endocrine disorders, long-term gastrointestinal dysfunction, food calcium deficiency, thyroid diseases (mainly hyperthyroidism) and so on. Related examinations can be further done, such as lumbar CT or magnetic resonance examination, which can rule out local lesions of vertebral body; You can also do endocrine hormone determination. In order to facilitate the corresponding treatment.