| Literature DB >> 27126809 |
William Z Morris1,2, Ryan T Li3, Raymond W Liu3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The triradiate cartilage transiently projects medially within the pelvic brim around the time of triradiate closure, mimicking the ischial spine sign. The purpose of this study was to characterize this newly identified radiographic sign using a longitudinal radiographic study.Entities:
Keywords: Acetabular retroversion; Femoroacetabular impingement; Hip development; Ischial spine sign; Radiographic study
Year: 2016 PMID: 27126809 PMCID: PMC4909652 DOI: 10.1007/s11832-016-0737-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Orthop ISSN: 1863-2521 Impact factor: 1.548
Fig. 1Appearance and remodeling of the ‘triradiate bump’ sign in an adolescent female (top row) and male (bottom row). This is a transient medial projection of the triradiate cartilage which mimics the ischial spine sign. The top row demonstrates how the bump resolves over a 5-year course, while the bottom row demonstrates how the bump becomes more prominent near the time of triradiate closure before resolving
Fig. 2Flow chart characterizing the screening and inclusion/exclusion criteria for the study’s sample population
Fig. 3The prominence of the ‘triradiate bump’ is measured as the amount of medial projection of the triradiate cartilage (white brackets) from a point perpendicular to the tangent of a best-fit ellipse overlaying the iliopectineal line
Fig. 4The minimum amount of medial projection of the triradiate cartilage considered a ‘positive’ triradiate bump sign was 3 mm. This cut-off was set as we noted medial lipping of the triradiate cartilage commonly broke the projected best-fit ellipse by 1–2 mm but did not reflect significant medial projection of the triradiate cartilage
Fig. 5Anterior−posterior plain film of the pelvis of a female aged 11 years and 11 months demonstrating medial prominence of both the ischial spines (white dashed line) and the triradiate cartilages (‘triradiate bump’, black dashed line). Note the triradiate cartilage is located superior to the ischial spine and has a horizontal limb of radiolucency