| Literature DB >> 21667906 |
Jae-Young Hong1, Seung-Woo Suh, Hitesh N Modi, Jae-Hyuk Yang, Young-Chul Hwang, Dong-Yul Lee, Chang-Yong Hur, Young-Hwan Park.
Abstract
We conducted a prospective cross-sectional study to examine the correlation between facial asymmetry, shoulder imbalance, and adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. Sixty-nine adolescent idiopathic scoliosis patients and 29 healthy volunteers were enrolled in this study. All patients underwent whole-spine standing anteroposterior radiographs and frontal cephalograms. Patients were divided into mild, moderate, and severe groups depending on Cobb angle (10°-25°, 25°-40°, and >40°, respectively). Facial measurements included maxilla height difference, ramus length difference, and anterior nasal spine-menton angle. Shoulder measurements included coracoid height difference, clavicular angle, clavicle-rib intersection difference, and radiographic shoulder height.The anterior nasal spine-menton angle in the severe group (>40°) was higher than in the other groups (P<.05), as was the clavicle-rib intersection difference (P<.05). In addition, the magnitude of the curve showed a possible correlation with the anterior nasal spine-menton angle and clavicle-rib intersection difference in scoliosis patients (r=0.433 and r=0.511, respectively). According to different curve patterns, the anterior nasal spine-menton angle and clavicle-rib intersection difference were significantly higher in the double thoracic group than in the other groups (P<.05). In the correlation analysis, the ramus length difference and anterior nasal spine-menton angle had a possible correlation with the coracoid height difference, clavicular angle, radiographic shoulder height, and clavicle-rib intersection difference (P<.05). Copyright 2011, SLACK Incorporated.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21667906 DOI: 10.3928/01477447-20110427-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orthopedics ISSN: 0147-7447 Impact factor: 1.390