Metacarpal thickness, width, length and medullary diameter in children—reference curves from the First Zürich Longitudinal Study

Summary Metacarpal thickness ( T ), width ( W ), length ( L ) and medullary diameter ( M ) were measured in 3,121 X-rays from 231 healthy Caucasian children aged 3 to 19 years and analysed for bone age, age, height, weight and gender-related characteristics, showing highly differentiated growth patt...

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Published inOsteoporosis international Vol. 22; no. 5; pp. 1525 - 1536
Main Authors Martin, D. D., Heckmann, C., Jenni, O. G., Ranke, M. B., Binder, G., Thodberg, H. H.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Springer-Verlag 01.05.2011
Springer
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:Summary Metacarpal thickness ( T ), width ( W ), length ( L ) and medullary diameter ( M ) were measured in 3,121 X-rays from 231 healthy Caucasian children aged 3 to 19 years and analysed for bone age, age, height, weight and gender-related characteristics, showing highly differentiated growth patterns with prepubertal dips. Reference data for the four metacarpal measures are presented. Introduction The aim of the study was to create and explore a reference database for metacarpal T , W , L and M in children. Methods Three thousand one hundred twenty-one left-hand X-rays (1,661 from boys) from 231 healthy Caucasian subjects (119 boys) aged 3 to 19 years were analysed by BoneXpert, a programme for automatic analysis of hand X-rays and bone age (BA; in years). Results In boys, growth of T , W and L shows a prepubertal decrease from BA 7 to 13 and then accelerates again. In girls, the same is seen only for T starting from BA 8 to 11, whereas W and L grow at a declining rate. M shows steady growth until BA 10.5 in girls and BA 13.5 in boys and then grows smaller in both. W is greater in boys from BA 6 onwards, while L is greater in girls from BA 9 to 13 and T from BA 11 to 14. BA is reflected best by L until start of puberty and by T and L thereafter. Conclusion T , W , L and M show highly differentiated growth patterns. These reference data provide a basis for further research into skeletal development and the management of hormone therapies in children.
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ISSN:0937-941X
1433-2965
DOI:10.1007/s00198-010-1389-9