A comparison of ultrasonic and mechanical stadiometry
a Medical
School, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, b Department of Paediatrics, Sheffield Children's Hospital,
Sheffield
Correspondence to: Dr J K H Wales, Department of Paediatrics, Sheffield Children's Hospital, Sheffield S10 2TH e-mail: j.k.wales{at}sheffield.ac.uk
Accepted 1
December 1997
AIM
To compare an ultrasonic height measuring
device (Gulliver) with mechanical stadiometry and the classical "book
and tape measure" method.
METHODS
Blinded duplicate measurements of height
were made on each of 14 children by a pair of observers using a
stadiometer (H) and Gulliver (G). Height was measured on a further 18 children by parents and an auxologist using Gulliver and the book and
tape method (TM), and the results were compared with those obtained with a single stadiometry measurement. Finally, measurement of a rigid
metal box was made on 10 occasions by the three methods.
RESULTS
In the group of 14 children, the
mean difference (range) in height (H minus G) was +2.8 cm (+0.5 to
+4.55 cm), with H giving a systematically higher value in 276 of 280 individual measurements. In the group of 18 children, height by H was
greater than by G or TM in 47 of 52 individual measurements. The mean
(SD) height of the box by H (61.60 (0.07) cm) was greater than by G
(60.96 (0.15) cm; p < 0.001) but not TM (61.4 (0.16) cm;
p > 0.05). G and TM produced three times less reliable estimations
of height than H, but with a large difference in cost, and there was
evidence of systematic underrecording of height by 0.5 cm with G.
CONCLUSIONS
Stadiometry is precise and
reproducible, and can detect true changes in height over one month
periods in mid-childhood, and should remain the standard way of
observing growth. The book and tape method can produce clinically
acceptable quarterly estimations of height that can be performed in the home.
© 1998 by Archives of Disease in Childhood
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