The femur is the longest and strongest bone in the human body. It is about 45 cm in length in an average man. The femoral neck-shaft angle (NSA) is very important in the diagnosis and treatment of many pathological conditions relating to the femur and hip joint. Our study aims to evaluate the values of femoral NSA and detect the relationship between this angle and age in the Sohag population. 3-Patients & Methods CT scans of 300 patients (40. 90 years, range of 18 -60 years; 150 females). CT scans were reformatted to three-dimensional pelvic models (3D) simulating standardized radiographic views of anteroposterior roentgenograms of the pelvis in the anterior pelvic plane (APP). NSA values were 129.45° (range 116.1°-146.7°; SD 4.88°) for patients aged from 18y to 39y & 129.48° (range 115.7°-145.9°; SD 5.25°) for patients aged from 40y to 60y. There was no statistically significant difference regarding NSA & age as p-value = .785 (p-value > .05). Correlation analysis revealed no significant relationship between NSA and age. Keywords Proximal femur 1, Neck-shaft angle (NSA) 2, Computerized Tomography (CT) 3, Morphometry 4, Age 5
IntroductionThe femur, or thigh bone, is the strongest and longest bone in the body, measuring about 45 cm in length in an ordinary man, or almost one-fourth of their height. It has a cylindrical shaft with an upper and lower end. The head, neck, greater and lesser trochanters, inter-trochanteric line, and inter-trochanteric crest make up the upper end. The neck is about 5 cm long, connects the head to the shaft, and is pointed upward, medially, and slightly forward, forming a 125-degree angle with the femur shaft in adults, but higher in children. The expanded neck-shaft angle allows for a wide range of hip joint movement, allowing the limb to swing freely (Sinha et al., 2017). The angle produced by the neck axis and the long axis of the femur shaft is known as the neck-shaft angle (NSA). It's also known as the femur neck angle, inclination angle, collodiaphyseal angle, cervicodiaphyscal angle (Anderson and Trinkaus, 1998) caput-collum-diaphyseal angle (CCD) (Shrestha et al., 2018), and Mikulicz angle (Sinha et al., 2017). The normal neck-shaft angle ranges from 115 to 140 degrees (with a mean of 126 degrees) (Shrestha et al., 2018). Men had a mean neck-shaft angle of 130.3 degrees, ranging from 121 to 138 degrees, whereas women had a lesser Article info. Citation: Bushra M., Galal A., Ouies S., & Mohamad M. (2022). Femoral neck-shaft angle in Sohag population and its variation relating to age.