## Correct Answer: A. Cobb’s angle Cobb's angle is the gold-standard radiological measurement of scoliosis severity and is universally used in clinical practice and research. The method involves identifying the most tilted vertebra at the superior end of the curve and the most tilted vertebra at the inferior end of the curve on a standing posteroanterior (PA) chest X-ray. Perpendicular lines are drawn to the superior endplate of the upper vertebra and the inferior endplate of the lower vertebra; the angle formed by these perpendiculars is Cobb's angle. This measurement is essential for diagnosis, monitoring disease progression, and determining surgical intervention thresholds in Indian orthopedic practice. A Cobb's angle >40° typically warrants surgical correction, while angles between 20–40° require observation with serial radiographs. The method's reproducibility and clinical relevance make it the standard across all major textbooks and guidelines, including those used in Indian medical education. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Ferguson angle** — Ferguson angle is an alternative measurement of scoliosis that uses the center of the vertebral bodies (rather than endplates) to construct the angle. While valid, it is less commonly used in routine clinical practice than Cobb's angle and is not the standard method taught in Indian orthopedic curricula. NBE includes this as a distractor because it is a real measurement technique, but Cobb's remains the gold standard. **C. Bauman's angle** — Bauman's angle is a radiological measurement used to assess **supracondylar fractures of the humerus**, not scoliosis. It is the angle formed between the anterior humeral line and the supracondylar fracture line. This is a classic NBE trap: including an orthopedic angle measurement from a completely different anatomical region to test whether students confuse measurement methods across different pathologies. **D. Bohler's angle** — Bohler's angle (also called Böhler's angle) is used to assess **calcaneal fractures**, not scoliosis. It is the angle formed between two lines drawn on a lateral foot X-ray to evaluate fracture severity and posterior facet involvement. This distractor tests whether students can distinguish scoliosis measurements from fracture-specific radiological angles used in foot and ankle orthopedics. ## High-Yield Facts - **Cobb's angle >40°** is the threshold for surgical intervention in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) in Indian practice guidelines. - **Cobb's angle 20–40°** requires observation with serial radiographs every 4–6 months to detect progression in growing children. - **Cobb's angle measurement** uses perpendiculars to the superior endplate of the upper vertebra and inferior endplate of the lower vertebra, not vertebral body centers. - **Intra- and inter-observer variability** of Cobb's angle is ±5°, making serial measurements by the same radiologist preferred for monitoring progression. - **Ferguson angle** uses vertebral body centers instead of endplates and is less reproducible; **Bauman's angle** assesses supracondylar humerus fractures; **Bohler's angle** assesses calcaneal fractures. ## Mnemonics **COBB for Scoliosis** **C**hest X-ray (PA view) → **O**btain most tilted vertebrae (top & bottom) → **B**isect perpendiculars to endplates → **B**uild the angle. Use this when you see any scoliosis measurement question. **Angle Anatomy Rule** **Cobb** = Spine (scoliosis), **Bauman** = Humerus (supracondylar), **Bohler** = Heel (calcaneus). Each angle belongs to a different bone—memorize the body part to eliminate distractors instantly. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs orthopedic angle measurements from different anatomical regions (Bauman's for humerus, Bohler's for calcaneus) with Cobb's angle to test whether students can distinguish scoliosis-specific radiological methods from fracture assessment techniques used elsewhere in orthopedics. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian pediatric orthopedic clinics, Cobb's angle is measured at every follow-up visit for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) patients. A single measurement >40° or progression of >5° over 6 months triggers referral for surgical consultation—this simple threshold guides management decisions for thousands of Indian children annually. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 37 (Orthopedics: Spine); Harrison Ch. 436 (Musculoskeletal Disorders)_
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