Literature DB >> 15199279

Southwick's head-shaft angles: normal standards and abnormal values observed in obesity and in patients with epiphysiolysis.

Claudio Santili1, Marcelo Camargo de Assis, Fernando Ige Kusabara, Ivania Lopes Romero, Cintia M Sartini, Carlos A Longui.   

Abstract

Southwick's angles measured in the anteroposterior and Lauenstein frog-leg views have been used for planning surgical treatment of deformities caused by slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE). Clinically established epiphysiolysis is associated with a decrease in anteroposterior angles and an increase in Lauenstein angles. Obesity is one of the factors involved in the development of SCFE, but its influence in Southwick's angles has not been previously described. Additionally, few reports describe normal values adjusted for sex and bone age. In this study, we determined Southwick's angles in normal control participants (n=70), in patients with obesity (n=31) and in patients with epiphysiolysis (n=33). The intra-observer variations were 1.7 and 23.3% for the anteroposterior and Lauenstein angles, respectively. No significant differences were detected in the control group when these individuals were compared according to sex or chronological age. Obese patients showed a significant increase in the anterposterior angle when compared with control individuals. The hip with epiphysiolysis presented a significant reduction in the anteroposterior angle and an increase in the Lauenstein angle, when the same was compared with the contralateral hip or with the control values. In patients with unilateral SCFE the Lauenstein angle of the normal hip was detected as increased, which was possibly related to the obesity associated with decreased insulin resistance presented by these patients. We conclude that the detection of risk for developing SCFE should include an expanded clinical and radiological profile characterized by pubertal males who present obesity associated with insulin resistance and an increase in Southwick's anteroposterior angle.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15199279     DOI: 10.1097/01.bpb.0000111042.46580.68

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pediatr Orthop B        ISSN: 1060-152X            Impact factor:   1.041


  7 in total

1.  A Novel Model of Hip Femoroacetabular Impingement in Immature Rabbits Reproduces the Distinctive Head-Neck Cam Deformity.

Authors:  Tomoyuki Kamenaga; Masahiko Haneda; Robert H Brophy; Regis J O'Keefe; John C Clohisy; Cecilia Pascual-Garrido
Journal:  Am J Sports Med       Date:  2022-04-13       Impact factor: 7.010

2.  The prognostic value of the head-shaft angle on hip displacement in children with cerebral palsy.

Authors:  J P J van der List; M M Witbreuk; A I Buizer; J A van der Sluijs
Journal:  J Child Orthop       Date:  2015-04-29       Impact factor: 1.548

3.  Radiographic evaluation in epiphysiolysis: possible predictors of bilaterality?

Authors:  Marcos Barbieri Mestriner; Cleber Marcial Aguilar Verquietini; Gilberto Waisberg; Miguel Akkari; Erika Tiemi Fukunaga; Cláudio Santili
Journal:  Acta Ortop Bras       Date:  2012       Impact factor: 0.513

4.  Evaluation of the Southwick Angle in Two Hundred Hips of Asymptomatic Children and Adolescents.

Authors:  Felipe Alves Monte; Paulo Sergio Melo; Amaro Alves; José Venâncio Oliveira Junior; George Alencar; Fabio Couto Soares
Journal:  Rev Bras Ortop (Sao Paulo)       Date:  2020-03-23

5.  COMPARISON OF THE FEMORAL HEAD HEIGHT/NECK LENGTH RATIO BETWEEN THE UNAFFECTED HIP OF PATIENTS WITH A UNILATERAL SLIPPED FEMORAL HEAD AND THE HIPS OF INDIVIDUALS WITHOUT A SLIPPED FEMORAL HEAD.

Authors:  Paulo Santoro Belangero; Thiago Amorim Bastos; Glauber Kazuo Linhares; Patrícia Corey Yamane; Paulo Ivan Miyagi; Sérgio Satoshi Kuwajima; Akira Ishida
Journal:  Rev Bras Ortop       Date:  2015-11-16

6.  Acetabular morphology in slipped capital femoral epiphysis: comparison at treatment onset and skeletal maturity.

Authors:  D A Maranho; A Davila-Parrilla; P E Miller; Y-J Kim; E N Novais; M B Millis
Journal:  J Child Orthop       Date:  2018-10-01       Impact factor: 1.548

7.  A Novel Classification System for Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis Based on the Radiographic Relationship of the Epiphyseal Tubercle and the Metaphyseal Socket.

Authors:  Daniel A Maranho; Sarah Bixby; Patricia E Miller; Eduardo N Novais
Journal:  JB JS Open Access       Date:  2019-11-08
  7 in total

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