Purpose of Review <p>Accurate interpretation of pediatric elbow imaging depends on understanding the developmental relationship between the radial head and the capitellum. While the traditional sequence of pediatric elbow ossification centers provides a useful framework, it does not capture morphologic variability, asynchronous maturation, and eccentric ossification patterns that may mimic pathology. This review synthesizes current evidence on pediatric elbow ossification with particular emphasis on normal and variant radial head development. The following key questions are addressed: (1) How frequently does eccentric radial head ossification occur on MRI? (2) What is its magnitude and relationship to age and sex? (3) How should normal variants be distinguished from pathology?</p> Recent Findings <p>Recent findings reveal that the capitellum commonly ossifies eccentrically before centralizing with growth. In our cohort of 66 children, radial head ossification was eccentric in 68–71% of cases in both sagittal and coronal planes. Offsets were small (average magnitude &lt; 3%), predominantly posterior and radial, and generally did not correlate with age except for progressive centralization in the coronal plane among males. The radiocapitellar line remained reliable on the lateral view but demonstrated expected lateral offset on AP views.</p> Summary <p>Eccentric radial head ossification represents a common physiologic pattern that does not reliably centralize with age. Recognition of this variant can reduce misdiagnosis and unnecessary intervention, and has implications for fracture assessment, surgical planning, and longitudinal research. Future studies should include prospective MRI tracking across diverse populations to establish normative ranges and develop quantitative tools for clinical applications.</p>

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Ossification of the Pediatric Elbow with a Focus on Radial Head Ossification Patterns

  • Tina H. Tran,
  • Hannah Chi,
  • Tiffany C. Liu,
  • Bamidele Kammen,
  • Ishaan Swarup

摘要

Purpose of Review

Accurate interpretation of pediatric elbow imaging depends on understanding the developmental relationship between the radial head and the capitellum. While the traditional sequence of pediatric elbow ossification centers provides a useful framework, it does not capture morphologic variability, asynchronous maturation, and eccentric ossification patterns that may mimic pathology. This review synthesizes current evidence on pediatric elbow ossification with particular emphasis on normal and variant radial head development. The following key questions are addressed: (1) How frequently does eccentric radial head ossification occur on MRI? (2) What is its magnitude and relationship to age and sex? (3) How should normal variants be distinguished from pathology?

Recent Findings

Recent findings reveal that the capitellum commonly ossifies eccentrically before centralizing with growth. In our cohort of 66 children, radial head ossification was eccentric in 68–71% of cases in both sagittal and coronal planes. Offsets were small (average magnitude < 3%), predominantly posterior and radial, and generally did not correlate with age except for progressive centralization in the coronal plane among males. The radiocapitellar line remained reliable on the lateral view but demonstrated expected lateral offset on AP views.

Summary

Eccentric radial head ossification represents a common physiologic pattern that does not reliably centralize with age. Recognition of this variant can reduce misdiagnosis and unnecessary intervention, and has implications for fracture assessment, surgical planning, and longitudinal research. Future studies should include prospective MRI tracking across diverse populations to establish normative ranges and develop quantitative tools for clinical applications.