Radiographic Comparison of Forearm Symmetry in Healthy Individuals and Its Importance in the Diagnosis of Longitudinal Radioulnar Dissociation.
Publication/Presentation Date
4-1-2025
Abstract
PURPOSE: Longitudinal radioulnar dissociation (LRD) is an injury often missed upon initial presentation. A recent study examined a radiographic screening test in cadavers that showed increased interosseous distance when the interosseous ligament (IOL) was divided. For this test to be clinically useful, it is necessary for uninjured forearms to have similar interosseous spaces. The purpose of this study was to determine the typical differences between right and left interosseous spaces of healthy individuals.
METHODS: Anterior-posterior x-rays of bilateral forearms in maximum supination of 28 surgical residents with no history of injury were obtained. These images were uploaded into a picture archiving and communication system and then digitized. The length of the radius was measured (X
RESULTS: The outlier analysis revealed two sets of forearm x-rays were rotationally different compared to the rest of the group due to asymmetric arm positioning; these data were excluded from the analysis. The average difference in D
CONCLUSIONS: There does not appear to be any significant difference between the maximum interosseous distance of right and left arms in healthy individuals. Therefore, analyzing bilateral forearm x-rays may be a simple LRD screening test.
CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Understanding the degree of normal variation in the forearm bone spacing might inform evaluation of abnormal forearm bone alignment resulting from LRD.
Volume
50
Issue
4
First Page
1
Last Page
505
ISSN
1531-6564
Published In/Presented At
Jones, C. M., Morway, G. R., Gutowski, C. J., & Darvish, K. (2025). Radiographic Comparison of Forearm Symmetry in Healthy Individuals and Its Importance in the Diagnosis of Longitudinal Radioulnar Dissociation. The Journal of hand surgery, 50(4), 505.e1–505.e6. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhsa.2023.10.008
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
37966398
Department(s)
Department of Surgery
Document Type
Article