Correlation of Serum Insulin-Like Growth Factor-1 and Hand Wrist Radiographs as Skeletal Maturity Indicators: An ex-vivo Study
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17762/jaz.v44i3.1459Keywords:
Cephalometry, Skeletal Maturity Assessment; Orthodontics; Pubertal Growth SpurtAbstract
Introduction: Conventional Hand and Wrist radiographs, have certain drawbacks of exposing orthodontic patients to unnecessary radiation hazards and subjectivity to errors. Serum insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) levels have been reported to increase until the pubertal peak in literature. The present study aims to assess the relationship between serum IGF-1 and skeletal maturity indicators Materials and Methods: Lateral cephalograms of 60 patients were assigned SMI stage according to Fishman’s classification system. The serum IGF-1 levels of the patients were also evaluated. Correlation between the serum IGF-1 levels, age of the patient, and their SMI stage was analyzed. Results: Pearson's coefficient of correlation revealed a non-significant weak positive correlation (p=0.69; >0.05) between age and IGF-1 levels, and a non-significant weak negative correlation (p =0.52; >0.05) between SMI stages and IGF-1 levels. Results of the ANOVA test indicated that there was no significant difference between mean IGF-1 levels across the different age groups and eleven SMI groups. However, there was a significant difference noted in the mean IGF-1 levels and the restructured SMI categories and groups. Conclusion: The moderate correlation between age and serum IGF-1 fluctuations during puberty underscores the hormone's pivotal role in adolescent growth. This positions serum IGF-1 as a potentially specific and reliable marker for assessing mandibular growth modifications, offering a radiation-free alternative to conventional radiographic methods.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2023 Sameer Narkhede, Karthick Shetty, Nitin Gadhiya, Sushma Sonawane, Paritosh BR Rao, Sanpreet Singh Sachdev, Sejal Jalpa

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.