[Computerized tomography measurement of torsion angle of the lower extremities].

The precise evaluation of post-traumatic deformities is indispensable when planning a corrective osteotomy. Torsional angles of the lower extremities of 186 patients were measured using CT. The mean age of the studied population was 34 years (18-80). It consisted of 131 men and 55 women. All patients had sustained a fracture of at least one of the leg's bony segments. The normal femoral (n = 293) inward torsion measured 23.47 degrees +/- 17.16 degrees (mean +/- 2 SD). Normal tibia (n = 263) outward torsion was 34.03 degrees +/- 17.22 degrees. The intraindividual torsional differences were not normally distributed. Normal femoral (n = 103) intraindividual torsional difference measured 11 degrees (95% percentile) and 15 degrees (99% percentile), with a median of 4 degrees. The tibiae (n = 76) showed a normal intraindividual torsional difference of 12 degrees (95% percentile) and 15 degrees (99% percentile). Right tibiae showed a statistically significant greater outward rotation when compared to their left counterpart (P < 0.001). No correlation to sex could be established. Preoperative planning of a corrective osteotomy should include the geometric evaluation of all four bony segments of the leg. Intraindividual torsional differences must be considered. A corrective osteotomy appears to be unnecessary with a torsional difference smaller than 15 degrees in the femora and smaller than 15 degrees in the tibiae.