Bone age (radiograph)

Last revised by Andrew Murphy on 23 Mar 2023

The bone age radiograph of the hand and wrist is a commonly performed examination to determine the radiographic age of the patient via the assessment of growth centers.

Bone age radiographs may be indicated for both clinical and non-clinical purposes 6,7:

  • for the investigation of
  • non-clinical examples include age assessment for legal purposes immigration (e.g. refugee / asylum sekeers) and elite sports, although assessment of age purely based on x-rays is not recommended
  • patient is seated alongside the table
  • the non-dominant hand is placed, palm down on the image receptor
  • shoulder, elbow, and wrist should all be in the transverse plane, perpendicular to the central beam
  • the hand and elbow should be at shoulder height which makes radius and ulna parallel (lowering the arm makes radius cross the ulna and thus relative shortening of radius)

NB: many departments will have a blanket rule of a left-hand radiograph for bone age, it is advisable to check the local protocols regarding this examination

  • posteroanterior projection
  • centering point
    • the mid-metacarpal region of the left hand 
  • collimation
    • laterally to the skin margins
    • proximal to include 1/3 of the forearm
    • distal to the tips of the distal phalanges 
  • orientation  
    • portrait
  • detector size
    • 18 cm x 24 cm
  • exposure
    • 50-60 kVp
    • 1-5 mAs
  • SID
    • 100 cm
  • grid
    • no

Fifth finger is positioned PA, with no rotation as evidenced by the symmetric appearance of the concavities of the phalanges. Interphalangeal and metacarpophalangeal joint spaces of digits 2 to 5 appear open.

The concavity of the metacarpal shafts is equal 1.

This is not a technically challenging radiograph, always ensure the fingers are equal distance apart and the detector is high enough to avoid overlap at the wrist.

Assessment is performed with a radiograph of the non-dominant hand with a single PA view that includes the distal radius and ulna and all the fingers. Appearances of the carpal bones, metacarpal, phalanges, radius and ulna are traditionally compared to standardized versions in atlases:

ADVERTISEMENT: Supporters see fewer/no ads

Updating… Please wait.

 Unable to process the form. Check for errors and try again.

 Thank you for updating your details.