AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to compare the Fels and Greulich-Pyle methods for assessing skeletal age (SA) in female youth soccer players aged 10 to 16.73 years.
  • Standardized radiographs were taken of 441 players, and various statistical analyses showed that the two methods had differing results, especially among older age groups, with a 74% agreement at younger ages that dropped significantly with age.
  • The research concluded that the Greulich-Pyle method generally provided lower skeletal age estimates than the Fels method, indicating significant variability between the methods and their implications for determining maturity status.

Article Abstract

Objective: The purpose of the study was to evaluate the agreement between the Fels and Greulich-Pyle methods for the assessment of skeletal age (SA) in female youth soccer players.

Methods: The sample included 441 Portuguese players 10.08-16.73 years of age who regularly participated in organized and competitive soccer. Standardized radiographs of the left hand-wrist were obtained and analyzed by an experienced examiner. SA was estimated with the Fels and Greulich-Pyle (GP) methods. Differences between SA and chronological age (CA) were used to define skeletal maturity groups: late, average and early maturing. In addition to descriptive statistics, Cohen's kappa and Lin concordance correlation coefficients were used to evaluate agreement between methods.

Results: Intraindividual differences in SA based on the two methods varied between 0.10 to 1.47 years among age groups with larger mean differences at older ages. Agreement of maturity classifications between methods was 74% at younger ages (under-13: kappa = 0.48; under-14: kappa = 0.39; Lin CCC = 0.68) and declined with increasing CA (under-17: 19% agreement; kappa = 0.001; Lin CCC = 0.11). About 19% of the total sample was skeletally mature with the Fels method and an SA was not assigned; in contrast, no players were skeletally mature with the GP method.

Conclusions: GP SAs were systematically lower than Fels SAs among female soccer players. Intraindividual variability in SAs between methods was considerable. The findings highlight the impact of method on estimates of maturity status.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajhb.23591DOI Listing

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