Md. Feldman et Pl. Schoenecker, USE OF THE METAPHYSEAL-DIAPHYSEAL ANGLE IN THE EVALUATION OF BOWED LEGS, Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume, 75A(11), 1993, pp. 1602-1609
We evaluated the accuracy of the angle described by Levine and Drennan
, the metaphyseal-diaphyseal angle of the proximal aspect of the tibia
, for the differentiation of physiological bowing from Blount disease.
We compared this angle, as measured at presentation, in 106 children
(179 extremities) who had physiological bowing with the angle in ninet
een children (thirty-two extremities) who had documented Blount diseas
e. The angle averaged 9 +/- 3.9 degrees for the patients who had physi
ological bowing and 19 +/- 5.7 degrees for the patients who had Blount
disease (p < 0.0000001). Linear regression analysis, performed to eva
luate any changes in the metaphyseal-diaphyseal angle in relation to a
ge, showed that the older the child was at the time of presentation th
e more likely it was that the angle would be smaller in a child who ha
d physiological bowing and larger in a child who had Blount disease. T
he chance for false-positive and false-negative errors was greater tha
n 5 per cent if the angle was more than 9 degrees but less than 16 deg
rees. Sixty-six (37 per cent) of the 179 extremities in the group that
had physiological bowing had an angle of at least 11 degrees; one ext
remity affected by Blount disease had an angle of less than 11 degrees
. In this study, we found that the metaphyseal-diaphyseal angle may be
helpful in the identification of Blount disease but should not be the
sole criterion used to determine the diagnosis.