Published 2007
| Version v1
Publication
Skeletal age assessment from the olecranon for idiopathic scoliosis at Risser grade 0
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Description
Background: Themain progression of idiopathic scoliosis occurs during peak height growth velocity, which is between the
ages of eleven and thirteen years in girls and thirteen and fifteen years in boys and corresponds to the accelerating phase of
pubertal growth. The Risser sign remains at grade 0 during this stage of growth. Triradiate cartilage closure occurs at
approximately twelve years of age in girls and fourteen years in boys, which is in the middle of this phase. In addition to
regular height measurements, a more detailed evaluation of skeletal maturity would be desirable prior to the identification
of Risser grade 1. From the method of Sauvegrain et al., Dim ́eglio derived a simplified method based on the radiographic
appearance of the olecranon, which allows skeletal age to be assessed in six-month intervals. The purpose of this study
was to determine the accuracy and the value of this simple method for the follow-up of patients with scoliosis.
Methods: Five radiographic images demonstrate the typical characteristics of the olecranon during pubertal growth: two
ossification nuclei, a half-moon image, a rectangular shape, the beginning of fusion, and complete fusion. This
classificationmethodwasevaluated by three experienced and independent observers fromlateral radiographs of the elbow
in 100 boys and 100 girls with idiopathic scoliosis during the time of peak height velocity. Skeletal ages were correlated
with the integral Sauvegrainmethod. The degree of interobserver concordance was determined, and skeletal age was compared
with chronological age and the time of triradiate cartilage closure.
Results: For the three observers, the average concordance between the Sauvegrain and olecranon methods was
excellent (r = 0.977 for boys and r = 0.938 for girls). The interobserver agreement was also excellent (r = 0.987 for the
olecranon method and r = 0.958 for the Sauvegrain method for boys, and r = 0.992 and r = 0.985, respectively, for girls).
Skeletal and chronological age were considered to correspond to each other within a six-month range for 49% of the boys
and 51% of the girls, while 25% of the boys and 26% of the girls had an advanced skeletal age and 26% of boys and 23%
of girls had a delayed skeletal age. Triradiate cartilage closure occurred at the same time as the appearance of the
rectangular shape of the olecranon in 65%of the boys and61%of the girls, corresponding to skeletal ages of fourteen and
twelve years, respectively. In 91% of the boys and 88% of the girls, the triradiate cartilage fused within six months before
to six months after the appearance of the rectangular shape of the olecranon, which occurred between the half-moon
image and the beginning of fusion of the olecranon.
Conclusions: Themethod of assessing skeletal age fromthe olecranon allowsskeletalmaturity to be evaluated in regular
six-month intervals during the phase of peak height velocity. This method is simple, precise, and reliable. It complements
the Risser grade-0 and the triradiate cartilage evaluation.
Level of Evidence: Prognostic Level II.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1187376
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1187376
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE