AI Article Synopsis

  • Osseous deformities in children can result from uneven growth or a complete stop in bone growth, and there are various methods to assess and correct these deformities through clinical evaluations and growth techniques.
  • Treatment options depend on factors like the deformity's type, location, and the child's age, with accurate predictions of limb length differences being essential for deciding when to intervene.
  • The paper emphasizes the need for reliable methods to evaluate and calculate growth potential, suggesting that the Sauvegrain method for assessing skeletal age could be more effective during growth spurts and that new multipliers are needed to improve accuracy.

Article Abstract

Osseous deformities in children arise due to progressive angular growth or complete physeal arrest. Clinical and radiological alignment measurements help to provide an impression of the deformity, which can be corrected using guided growth techniques. However, little is known about timing and techniques for the upper extremity. Treatment options for deformity correction include monitoring of the deformity, (hemi-)epiphysiodesis, physeal bar resection, and correction osteotomy. Treatment is dependent on the extent and location of the deformity, physeal involvement, presence of a physeal bar, patient age, and predicted length inequality at skeletal maturity. An accurate estimation of the projected limb or bone length inequality is crucial for optimal timing of the intervention. The Paley multiplier method remains the most accurate and simple method for calculating limb growth. While the multiplier method is accurate for calculating growth prior to the growth spurt, measuring peak height velocity (PHV) is superior to chronological age after the onset of the growth spurt. PHV is closely related to skeletal age in children. The Sauvegrain method of skeletal age assessment using elbow radiographs is possibly a simpler and more reliable method than the method by Greulich and Pyle using hand radiographs. PHV-derived multipliers need to be developed for the Sauvegrain method for a more accurate calculation of limb growth during the growth spurt. This paper provides a review of the current literature on the clinical and radiological evaluation of normal upper extremity alignment and aims to provide state-of-the-art directions on deformity evaluation, treatment options, and optimal timing of these options during growth.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9954695PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/children10020195DOI Listing

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