
It is important to evaluate skeletal maturation in orthodontic treatment. Hand-wrist and cervical maturation stages have been shown to be correlated with skeletal growth changes during puberty. The cervical vertebrae have 6 maturation phases, whereas the medial phalange of the third finger has 5 stages; a modified version has 6 stages. The purpose of this study was to determine the correlation of the cervical vertebrae maturation index with the modified medial phalange index.Lateral cephalometric and left-hand medial phalange radiographs of 150 males between the ages of 9 and 19 who were referred for orthodontic treatment were examined.The 6 modified medial phalange stages were found to correlate with the 6 cervical vertebral maturation stages.Because cervical vertebrae stage is a reliable maturation indicator, the medial phalange of the third finger can be used instead to assess a subject's skeletal maturation.
Adult, Male, Observer Variation, Adolescent, Cephalometry, Puberty, Reproducibility of Results, Finger Phalanges, [No Keyword], Age Determination by Skeleton, Cervical Vertebrae, Humans, Child
Adult, Male, Observer Variation, Adolescent, Cephalometry, Puberty, Reproducibility of Results, Finger Phalanges, [No Keyword], Age Determination by Skeleton, Cervical Vertebrae, Humans, Child
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