Walker Janet L, Hosseinzadeh Pooya, White Hank, Murr Kevin, Milbrandt Todd A, Talwalkar Vishwas J, Iwinski Henry, Muchow Ryan
Shriners Hospitals for Children.
University of Kentucky Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, Lexington, KY.
J Pediatr Orthop. 2019 Aug;39(7):347-352. doi: 10.1097/BPO.0000000000000971.
Obesity as a cause of lower extremity deformity in children has been well established. This deformity is most often seen as tibia vara, however, at our institution we have observed more obese children and adolescents over age 7 years with excessive or progressive idiopathic genu valgum. Our hypothesis is that children with idiopathic genu valgum have high rates of obesity which impact the severity of their disease.
Retrospective review of existing data was performed on 66 consecutive children/112 limbs over age 7 years with idiopathic genu valgum, seen from 2010 to 2013. Children with known metabolic or skeletal disease were excluded. Genu valgum was defined as mechanical axis in zone II or III and mechanical tibiofemoral angle ≥4 degrees on standing anteroposterior radiograph of the lower extremities. Body mass index (BMI) was calculated and classified by Center for Disease Control percentiles. Skeletal maturation was rated by closure of pelvic and peri-genu physes. Severity of genu valgum was also assessed by femoral and tibial mechanical axes and the mechanical axis deviation.
Mean patient age was 12.2±2.2 years. 47% of patients had BMI≥30 and 71% were categorized as obese (>95th percentile). No sex differences were identified. Skeletal maturation explained 25% of the variance in the mechanical axis deviation and 22% of the mechanical tibiofemoral angle. BMI predicted 9.8% of the tibial valgus. Because of its skewed distribution, BMI percentile was a less useful parameter for assessment.
The 71% obesity rate found in our children with idiopathic genu valgum is significantly higher than the normal population. Higher BMI is associated with more tibial valgum but skeletal maturation was the main predictor of overall valgus severity. This suggests that obesity may play a role in the etiology of idiopathic genu valgum which progresses with skeletal maturation, thereby increasing the risk of osteoarthritis in adulthood.
Level III.
肥胖作为儿童下肢畸形的一个原因已得到充分证实。这种畸形最常表现为胫骨内翻,然而,在我们机构,我们观察到更多7岁以上的肥胖儿童和青少年患有过度或进行性特发性膝外翻。我们的假设是,患有特发性膝外翻的儿童肥胖率较高,这会影响其疾病的严重程度。
对2010年至2013年期间连续就诊的66名7岁以上患有特发性膝外翻的儿童/112条肢体的现有数据进行回顾性分析。排除患有已知代谢或骨骼疾病的儿童。膝外翻定义为下肢站立前后位X线片上机械轴位于II区或III区且机械性胫股角≥4度。计算体重指数(BMI)并根据疾病控制中心百分位数进行分类。通过骨盆和膝周骨骺的闭合情况评估骨骼成熟度。还通过股骨和胫骨机械轴以及机械轴偏差评估膝外翻的严重程度。
患者平均年龄为12.2±2.2岁。47%的患者BMI≥30,71%被归类为肥胖(>第95百分位数)。未发现性别差异。骨骼成熟度解释了机械轴偏差中25%的方差以及机械性胫股角中22%的方差。BMI预测了9.8%的胫骨外翻。由于其分布呈偏态,BMI百分位数作为评估参数不太有用。
我们发现患有特发性膝外翻的儿童中71%的肥胖率显著高于正常人群。较高的BMI与更多的胫骨外翻相关,但骨骼成熟度是总体外翻严重程度的主要预测因素。这表明肥胖可能在特发性膝外翻的病因中起作用,且随着骨骼成熟而进展,从而增加成年后患骨关节炎的风险。
III级。