Abstract

The purpose of this review is to clarify the different methods of predictions for growth of the lower limb and to propose a simplified method to calculate the final limb deficit and the correct timing of epiphysiodesis. Lower-limb growth is characterized by four different periods: antenatal growth (exponential); birth to 5 years (rapid growth); 5 years to puberty (stable growth); and puberty, which is the final growth spurt characterized by a rapid acceleration phase lasting 1 year followed by a more gradual deceleration phase lasting 1.5 years. The younger the child, the less precise is the prediction. Repeating measurements can increase the accuracy of predictions and those calculated at the beginning of puberty are the most accurate. The challenge is to reduce the margin of uncertainty. Confrontation of the different parameters-bone age, Tanner signs, annual growth velocity of the standing height, sub-ischial length and sitting height-is the most accurate method. Charts and diagrams are only models and templates. There are many mathematical equations in the literature; we must be able to step back from these rigid calculations because they are a false guarantee. The dynamic of growth needs a flexible approach. There are, however, some rules of thumb that may be helpful for different clinical scenarios. For congenital malformations, at birth the limb length discrepancy must be multiplied by 5 to give the final limb length discrepancy. Multiple by 3 at 1 year of age; by 2 at 3 years in girls and 4 years in boys; by 1.5 at 7 years in girls and boys, by 1.2 at 9 years in girls and 11 years in boys and by 1.1 at the onset of puberty (11 years bone age for girls and 13 years bone age for boys). For the timing of epiphysiodesis, several simple principles must be observed to reduce the margin of error; strict and repeated measurements, rigorous analysis of the data obtained, perfect evaluation of bone age with elbow plus hand radiographs and confirmation with Tanner signs. The decision should always be taken at the beginning of puberty. A simple rule is that, at the beginning of puberty, there is an average of 5 cm growth remaining at the knee. There are four common different scenarios: (1) A 5-cm discrepancy-epiphysiodesis of both femur and tibia at the beginning of puberty (11 years bone age girls and 13 years in boys). (2) A 4-cm discrepancy-epiphysiodesis of femur and tibia 6 months after the onset of puberty (11 years 6 months bone age girls, 13 years 6 months bone age boys, tri-radiate cartilage open). (3) A 3-cm discrepancy-epiphysiodesis of femur only at the start of puberty, (skeletal age of 11 years in girls and 13 years in boys). (4) A 2-cm discrepancy-epiphysiodesis of femur only, 1 year after the start of puberty (12 years bone age girls and 14 years in boys).

Highlights

  • The purpose of this review is to clarify the different methods of predictions for growth of the lower limb and to propose a simplified method to calculate the final limb deficit and the correct timing of epiphysiodesis

  • Modern ultrasonography can give an idea of foetal lower-limb growth during antenatal life, and there are many established databases for estimating foetal femoral length [3,4,5,6]

  • The final growth spurt before skeletal maturity commences at the onset of puberty. This starts at 13 years of bone age for boys and 11 years of bone age for girls

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Summary

Growth is a change in proportion

The standing height is 50 cm: 70% (35 cm) for sitting height and 30% (15 cm) for sub-ischial length. Sub-ischial length increases from 15 cm at birth to 81 cm in boys and 74.5 cm in girls at skeletal maturity. From birth to skeletal maturity, lower-limb length increases by a factor of 5.25 compared with only 2.67 times for spinal growth. Repeated serial measurements of standing height, sitting height and sub-ischial lengths are the only way to best capture the complexity of growth. These measurements provide a real-time image of growth and, when carefully recorded in a continually updated ‘‘growth notebook’’, they provide charts that assist in decision-making processes [1, 2]

Periods of growth
Five years to puberty
Final deficit estimation
Lower limb growth is complete after Risser I
Lower limb growth is complete after Risser I and menarche
Antenatal multiplier
Final stature estimation
Timing of epiphysiodesis
Risser I
Elbow closure
Findings
Predictions may be predictable
Full Text
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