T J Cole1. 1. Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Institute of Child Health, London WC1N 1EH, UK. Tim.Cole@ich.ucl.ac.uk
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To develop a chart to identify non-familial short stature. DESIGN: A height chart that adjusts for maternal, paternal, midparental, or sibling height based on the British 1990 height reference. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Height between 2 and 9 years of age. RESULTS: The chart identifies children whose height is below the familially adjusted 0.4th centile, assuming a correlation of 0.4 between child height standard deviation score (SDS) and familial height SDS. The adjustment can be for parents, either alone or together, or for a sibling aged 2-9 years. The chart identifies about 2 children/1,000 over and above the 4/1,000 identified by the unconditional 0.4th centile. CONCLUSION: The chart should be a useful addition to screening programmes for short stature.
OBJECTIVE: To develop a chart to identify non-familial short stature. DESIGN: A height chart that adjusts for maternal, paternal, midparental, or sibling height based on the British 1990 height reference. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Height between 2 and 9 years of age. RESULTS: The chart identifies children whose height is below the familially adjusted 0.4th centile, assuming a correlation of 0.4 between child height standard deviation score (SDS) and familial height SDS. The adjustment can be for parents, either alone or together, or for a sibling aged 2-9 years. The chart identifies about 2 children/1,000 over and above the 4/1,000 identified by the unconditional 0.4th centile. CONCLUSION: The chart should be a useful addition to screening programmes for short stature.
Authors: Anuradha V Khadilkar; Shashi A Chiplonkar; Neha A Kajale; Veena H Ekbote; Lavanya Parathasarathi; Raja Padidela; Vaman V Khadilkar Journal: Pediatr Res Date: 2018-01-17 Impact factor: 3.756