Published 2008
| Version v1
Publication
Skeletal age assessment from elbow radiographs: review of the literature
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Description
Abstract Skeletal age is important to evaluate remaining
growth. In 50% of normal children and adolescents, skeletal
age does not differ from chronological age. During
puberty, skeletal age is an important tool when performing
a lower limb epiphysiodesis or when treating (conservatively
or surgically) patients with spinal deformities. Skeletal
age alone is not enough and should be assessed together
with other clinical and radiological findings such as standing
and sitting heights, Risser sign, Tanner stages and annual
growth rate. Puberty starts at 11 years of skeletal age and
ends at 13 years of skeletal age in girls; in boys, puberty
starts two years later (13 years of skeletal age) and then
ends at a skeletal age of 15. Most current clinical and radiographic
markers do not help paediatric orthopaedic surgeons
to clearly distinguish maturity levels prior to Risser I.
Sauvegrain et al. developed a method to assess skeletal age
by using elbow radiographs (AP and lateral projections).
Between 11 and 13 years of skeletal age in girls and
between 13 and 15 years of skeletal age in boys, the olecranon
apophysis is characterised by a clear morphological
development. This method is a reliable tool to assess skeletal
age during puberty because significant morphological
changes in the elbow happen every six months.
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- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1187391
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1187391
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- Origin repository
- UNIGE