Table 1. Structural (Anatomical) and Functional Causes of Leg Length Discrepancy.
Type of LLD | Definition | Subcategory | Possible cause | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Structural (anatomical) | Physical shortening or lengthening of the tibia or femur | Congenital | Limb shortening | |
• Fibular hemimelia, tibial hemimelia | ||||
• Proximal focal femoral deficiency | ||||
• Skeletal dysplasias Limb lengthening | ||||
• Congenital hemihypertrophy (idiopathic non-syndromic hemihypertrophy) | ||||
• Dysmorphic syndromes (Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome; proteus syndrome, Klippel-Trenaunay-Weber syndrome) | ||||
• Gigantism with neurofibromatosis | ||||
Acquired | Shortening | |||
• Trauma (Salter-Harris fractures, slipped capital femoral epiphysis, iatrogenic) | ||||
• Infection (osteomyelitis, septic arthritis) | ||||
• Osteonecrosis following developmental dysplasia of the hip | ||||
• Inflammation (juvenile idiopathic arthritis) | ||||
• Neoplasms | ||||
• Radiation | ||||
• Idiopathic (Blount disease or Legg-Perthes disease) | ||||
• Neurologic disorders (cerebral palsy, polio, peripheral nerve injury) Lengthening | ||||
• Neoplasms | ||||
• Osteomyelitis stimulating growth plate | ||||
• Chronic hyperemia | ||||
Functional | Apparent asymmetry of the lower extremity, without shortening or lengthening of the osseous components of the lower limb | Pelvic obliquity due to | ||
• Adaptive soft-tissue shortening | ||||
• Joint or muscle contractures | ||||
• Ligamentous laxity | ||||
• Axial malalignment | ||||
• Developmental dysplasia of the hip |
LLD: leg length discrepancy.