Revista Brasileira de Ortopedia (Oct 2023)

Measurement of Clavicular Symmetry in Healthy Subjects Using Tomographic Database of Public Hospitals

  • Gabriel Gomes de Oliveira Ribas,
  • Leonardo Dau,
  • Felipe Fernandes Gonçalves,
  • Maria Helena Santos de Oliveira,
  • Nicole Sofia Herman Marques,
  • Geovanna Andrade Labres de Souza

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0043-1772241
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 58, no. 4
pp. 617 – 624

Abstract

Read online Read online

Abstract Objective This study aimed to perform an imaging evaluation to prove the existence or not of symmetry between the clavicles of healthy subjects from Curitiba, Paraná, Brazil, and identify potential factors influencing the clavicular length. Method The study analyzed chest computed tomography (CT) scans of 211 patients with no clavicular fracture or malformations (100 women and 111 men). We measured the greatest clavicular diagonal on both sides, and the software automatically generated the maximum distance in millimeters. Relative and absolute frequencies described qualitative variables and mean values; quantitative variables used a 95% confidence interval. Value comparisons employed the student's t-test, and correlations determinations used Pearson's correlation coefficient. The significance level adopted was 5%. Results There was a significant difference between the clavicular length (right clavicle, 143.58 mm; left clavicle, 145.72 mm; p = 0.037), indicating asymmetry. On average, the left clavicle was 3.71 mm larger. Asymmetry was significant for both men and women (p 10 mm of asymmetry. Conclusion The studied population did not present clavicular symmetry. On average, the left clavicle was longer than the right clavicle, with differences of 3.71 mm in the general sample, 3.23 mm in women, and 4.13 mm in men. The only significant factor was gender since men presented longer clavicles and higher differences than women.

Keywords