Journal article
The skeletal maturity of Australian children aged 10–13 years in 2016
RL Duckham, NL Hawley, C Rodda, T Rantalainen, KD Hesketh
Annals of Human Biology | TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD | Published : 2021
Abstract
Skeletal maturity can be used as a biological indicator of the tempo of growth in children and adolescents. We present a description of skeletal maturity from a cohort of white Australian children and describe variation in skeletal maturity based on child age. Participants (n = 71; age 10.5–13.9 years) were recruited from the ‘Healthy, Active Preschool & Primary Years (HAPPY)’ study. Left hand-wrist radiographs were used to determine skeletal maturity using the Tanner-Whitehouse III (TW3) RUS technique. In boys, the mean skeletal maturity offset (bone age–chronological age) was −0.12 ± 0.19 years and 57.9% had delayed skeletal maturity compared to chronological age. Among those with delayed ..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This study was funded by the Central Research Grant Scheme through Deakin University. KDH is supported by an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship [FT130100637].