Limb Lengthening Forum

Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Advanced search  
Pages: [1] 2   Go Down

Author Topic: If you have femur tibia ratio of 0.8, which one is better to be 0.7 or 0.9?  (Read 6207 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

..

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 843

In other words, which bone to lengthen?

I just did my femur mockup and look like a freak whereas the tibia mockup looks good.
« Last Edit: June 08, 2018, 09:57:43 PM by Bruce Wayne »
Logged

Johnson1111

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 437

I think the Tibia mockup will always look better because longer tibias look really good on men whereas longer femurs are better looking for girls
Logged

FormerKidd

  • Full Member
  • **
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 205

In terms of health, longer femurs are better.  (There's a study that's been linked elsewhere on this forum that studied people outside these ratios and found correlations between certain late-life issues and longer tibias.)
Logged

..

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 843

I think the Tibia mockup will always look better because longer tibias look really good on men whereas longer femurs are better looking for girls

It's not just "good". More like the difference between "normal" and "freak".

In terms of health, longer femurs are better.  (There's a study that's been linked elsewhere on this forum that studied people outside these ratios and found correlations between certain late-life issues and longer tibias.)

We live shorter with tibia lengthening? Did the study mean people born with long tibias or people who lengthen tibias?
Logged

Johnson1111

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 437

It's not just "good". More like the difference between "normal" and "freak".

We live shorter with tibia lengthening? Did the study mean people born with long tibias or people who lengthen tibias?

If someone’s femur and tibia ratio is normal, is something like 6cm in the femur enough to throw them out of the normal range? Or is it just in our head because we are judging ourselves too hard?
Logged

..

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 843

If someone’s femur and tibia ratio is normal, is something like 6cm in the femur enough to throw them out of the normal range? Or is it just in our head because we are judging ourselves too hard?

No, I'm pretty convinced now that it's the femur one isn't normal.

Here's a quote that I found: "The femur/ tibia percentage ratio from individual to individual normally falls from 52:48 UP to 56:44."

That's 0.92 to 0.78. So 0.7 ratio is not normal when 0.9 is still on the height end of normal range.
Logged

myloginacc

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 588

No, I'm pretty convinced now that it's the femur one isn't normal.

Here's a quote that I found: "The femur/ tibia percentage ratio from individual to individual normally falls from 52:48 UP to 56:44."

That's 0.92 to 0.78. So 0.7 ratio is not normal when 0.9 is still on the height end of normal range.

So what were your (estimated) bone measurements again? Tibias, femurs, and t/f ratio?
Logged
Formerly myloginacct; had issues with my login account.
Yes I do want to add, before doing this surgery, ask yourself if you have optimized your life to the fullest extent possible (job/career, personality, etc).

..

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 843

So what were your (estimated) bone measurements again? Tibias, femurs, and t/f ratio?

About 46 : 37. I measured it manually, so could be not very accurate.
Logged

Purushrottam

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 387

I think myloginacct posted a study that showed that the risk of arthiritis is higher if the tibia to femur ratio deviates too high from 0.8. That study suggested that bias should be towards lengthening the femur over the tibia.
Logged
Had LL in Sept 2017 with Dr. Paley.
Starting height: 168.5 cm (5'6.5"); Ending height: 175 cm (5'9")
http://www.limblengtheningforum.com/index.php?topic=4823.0

myloginacc

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 588

About 46 : 37. I measured it manually, so could be not very accurate.

Yeah, probably not perfect measurements. I'm assuming 46cm for femurs and 37cm for tibias.

Still, those measurements give you a 0.804 t/f ratio. That's super normal, at least according to that study. The average deviation is +/- 0.03 from 0.80. Thus, a normal/average T/F ratio, according to the study, is 0.77~0.83.

Going with the quoted "safe figures" in the forums... 5cm on tibias, and 6.5cm on femurs... If you actually did both segments, that'd give you a 0.80 ratio. If you did 5cm+5cm, you'd end up at 0.82. If you did 5cm tibias, 8cm femurs, you'd end up at 0.77. All average according to the study.

On the other hand, if you were lengthening only one segment, you could only lengthen your femurs by... 2cm... to keep within what the study shows as the lower end average for T/F ratio (0.770). For tibias, you could only lengthen them by 1.2cm to keep a normal/average t/f ratio (it'd go up to 0.830). 1.6cm would give you 0.839, the limit at 0.83.
Logged
Formerly myloginacct; had issues with my login account.
Yes I do want to add, before doing this surgery, ask yourself if you have optimized your life to the fullest extent possible (job/career, personality, etc).

myloginacc

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 588

I think myloginacct posted a study that showed that the risk of arthiritis is higher if the tibia to femur ratio deviates too high from 0.8. That study suggested that bias should be towards lengthening the femur over the tibia.

Yep:

Quote
Increasing tibia length relative to femur length was found to be a significant predictor of ipsilateral hip and knee arthritis. Therefore, we recommend that when performing limb lengthening, surgical planning should lean toward recreating the normal ratio of 0.80. In circumstances where one bone is to be overlengthened relative to the other, bias should be toward overlengthening the femur. This same principle can be applied to limb-reduction surgery, where in certain circumstances, one may choose to preferentially shorten the tibia.
Logged
Formerly myloginacct; had issues with my login account.
Yes I do want to add, before doing this surgery, ask yourself if you have optimized your life to the fullest extent possible (job/career, personality, etc).

..

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 843

Yeah, probably not perfect measurements. I'm assuming 46cm for femurs and 37cm for tibias.

Still, those measurements give you a 0.804 t/f ratio. That's super normal, at least according to that study. The average deviation is +/- 0.03 from 0.80. Thus, a normal/average T/F ratio, according to the study, is 0.77~0.83.

Going with the quoted "safe figures" in the forums... 5cm on tibias, and 6.5cm on femurs... If you actually did both segments, that'd give you a 0.80 ratio. If you did 5cm+5cm, you'd end up at 0.82. If you did 5cm tibias, 8cm femurs, you'd end up at 0.77. All average according to the study.

On the other hand, if you were lengthening only one segment, you could only lengthen your femurs by... 2cm... to keep within what the study shows as the lower end average for T/F ratio (0.770). For tibias, you could only lengthen them by 1.2cm to keep a normal/average t/f ratio (it'd go up to 0.830). 1.6cm would give you 0.839, the limit at 0.83.

According to this older post: http://www.makemetaller .org/index.php?topic=293.0, it could be up to 52:48. Probably your study just means average range instead of normal range which is difference. For example, a 5'1" man is well below the average height of man of 5'10" but he's not abnormal either because there are many men who are born 5'1". But 4' man is another story.
Logged

myloginacc

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 588

According to this older post: http://www.makemetaller .org/index.php?topic=293.0, it could be up to 52:48. Probably your study just means average range instead of normal range which is difference. For example, a 5'1" man is well below the average height of man of 5'10" but he's not abnormal either because there are many men who are born 5'1". But 4' man is another story.

Your figures use percentage. 52% femurs and 48% tibias, and 56% femurs and 44% tibias.

Starting from your original (83cm) total leg length:

.56*83 = 46.48
.44*83 = 36.52

36.52/46.48 = 0.78.

.52*83 = 43.16
.48*83 = 39.89

39.89/43.16 = 0.92.

This is the supposed natural range your t/f ratios could have been. Indeed, your femurs are on the longer side of the spectrum according to M M T (0.804, closer to 0.78 - or 56% femurs). Whereas the ratio is almost perfect according to the study.

If you increased your height by 5cm (37cm tibias; 46cm femurs): tibias would give you a 0.91 t/f ratio (supposedly normal given the old forums' ratios). 5cm on femurs would give you a 0.72 t/f ratio (deviating from both the M M T post and the study). This almost seems too good for tibias, and anathema to the anecdotal evidence of femoral vs tibial patients posted here.

I'm not calling bs on the ratios from that post because human proportions vary. Black men have shorter trunks, longer legs (specially tibias) and longer forearms compared to white men of the same height. However, one figure is from a study which examined a cadaveric osteological collection, not written by doctors involved in cosmetic LL (JPO), and which evaluated correlation between t/f and osteoarthritis through multiple regression analysis. The other is by a former admin of the previous forum, a place involved in collusion scandals with CLL doctors, specially getting them to do external tibias in places like India. It may be because I don't have an account on the old forums, but I can't find the source for the ranges he posted and termed as the "normal range" of femur:tibia ratios.

The main counterargument you can use against the study is that it comes from the JPO - the Journal of Pediatric Orthopedics, which is under the umbrella of POSNA - the Pedriatic Orthopedic Society of North America.

However, the Hamann-Todd osteological collection doesn't seem to even focus towards infant and adolescent bone collections:

http://www.oberlinlibstaff.com/omeka_projects/exhibits/show/ohio-bones/the-hamann-todd-osteological-c
https://www.cmnh.org/phys-anthro/collection-database
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleveland_Museum_of_Natural_History

Quote
Hamann-Todd Human Osteological Collection

This collection contains more than 3,000 cadaver-derived human skeletons collected by Carl A. Hamann and T. Wingate Todd between 1912 and 1938. Superb documentation makes this the world’s largest documented collection of modern human skeletal remains.
 
The Hamann-Todd Human Osteological Collection is accessible for legitimate research and study by qualified investigators. Access is free for non-commercial use.
Logged
Formerly myloginacct; had issues with my login account.
Yes I do want to add, before doing this surgery, ask yourself if you have optimized your life to the fullest extent possible (job/career, personality, etc).

..

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 843

Your figures use percentage. 52% femurs and 48% tibias, and 56% femurs and 44% tibias.

Starting from your original (83cm) total leg length:

.56*83 = 46.48
.44*83 = 36.52

36.52/46.48 = 0.78.

.52*83 = 43.16
.48*83 = 39.89

39.89/43.16 = 0.92.

This is the supposed natural range your t/f ratios could have been. Indeed, your femurs are on the longer side of the spectrum according to M M T (0.804, closer to 0.78 - or 56% femurs). Whereas the ratio is almost perfect according to the study.

If you increased your height by 5cm (37cm tibias; 46cm femurs): tibias would give you a 0.91 t/f ratio (supposedly normal given the old forums' ratios). 5cm on femurs would give you a 0.72 t/f ratio (deviating from both the M M T post and the study). This almost seems too good for tibias, and anathema to the anecdotal evidence of femoral vs tibial patients posted here.

I'm not calling bs on the ratios from that post because human proportions vary. Black men have shorter trunks, longer legs (specially tibias) and longer forearms compared to white men of the same height. However, one figure is from a study which examined a cadaveric osteological collection, not written by doctors involved in cosmetic LL (JPO), and which evaluated correlation between t/f and osteoarthritis through multiple regression analysis. The other is by a former admin of the previous forum, a place involved in collusion scandals with CLL doctors, specially getting them to do external tibias in places like India. It may be because I don't have an account on the old forums, but I can't find the source for the ranges he posted and termed as the "normal range" of femur:tibia ratios.

The main counterargument you can use against the study is that it comes from the JPO - the Journal of Pediatric Orthopedics, which is under the umbrella of POSNA - the Pedriatic Orthopedic Society of North America.

However, the Hamann-Todd osteological collection doesn't seem to even focus towards infant and adolescent bone collections:

http://www.oberlinlibstaff.com/omeka_projects/exhibits/show/ohio-bones/the-hamann-todd-osteological-c
https://www.cmnh.org/phys-anthro/collection-database
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleveland_Museum_of_Natural_History

Yeah, I also thought that with 5cm on tibia, I'd still fall into normal range according to the old forum while it wouldn't be the case with femur lengthening. Eventhough, I was wondering how they came up with that number too. But your study actually mentioned the average and not the normal range.

In the end, based on my mockups, I look more normal with the 5cm tibias.
Logged

myloginacc

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 588

Yeah, I also thought that with 5cm on tibia, I'd still fall into normal range according to the old forum while it wouldn't be the case with femur lengthening. Eventhough, I was wondering how they came up with that number too. But your study actually mentioned the average and not the normal range.

In the end, based on my mockups, I look more normal with the 5cm tibias.

Here's from Paley himself too. Of course standard deviations still exist.
Logged
Formerly myloginacct; had issues with my login account.
Yes I do want to add, before doing this surgery, ask yourself if you have optimized your life to the fullest extent possible (job/career, personality, etc).

myloginacc

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 588

Also, Bruce, if you read this thread again, bear in mind Android said (in his diary) his leg length estimates were totally off. You can only really know your numbers by getting them measured through x-rays.
Logged
Formerly myloginacct; had issues with my login account.
Yes I do want to add, before doing this surgery, ask yourself if you have optimized your life to the fullest extent possible (job/career, personality, etc).

..

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 843

Here's from Paley himself too. Of course standard deviations still exist.

Also, Bruce, if you read this thread again, bear in mind Android said (in his diary) his leg length estimates were totally off. You can only really know your numbers by getting them measured through x-rays.

Fair enough. My estimation is most likely wrong.
Logged

Valiant

  • Newbie
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Posts: 40

Based on the measurements I took of myself, I seem to have a femur to tibia ratio of 0.92. I always had difficultly running, where my calfs would fatigue quite quickly and I need to walk a bit and recover before I can run or jog again. I am now starting to think maybe it's related to my femur/tibia ratio.
Logged

Moon knight

  • Jr. Member
  • *
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Posts: 125

Mine are probably around 50-50 example tibia is 35 cm and femur is is around 35 cm as well
Logged
It’s not a surgery for the faint hearted if you do it your stronger then you really believe

Valiant

  • Newbie
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Posts: 40

Mine are probably around 50-50 example tibia is 35 cm and femur is is around 35 cm as well

That makes you an excellent candidate for femur lengthening and not just to be taller but for maintaining joint health in the long term. Usually the top range is 0.92, but you're 1, which is unusual. Did you measure yourself or with assistance?

Logged

Moon knight

  • Jr. Member
  • *
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Posts: 125

That makes you an excellent candidate for femur lengthening and not just to be taller but for maintaining joint health in the long term. Usually the top range is 0.92, but you're 1, which is unusual. Did you measure yourself or with assistance?

I did it twice on my own it was like 35 cm lower leg and 37 cm upper leg so I actually got a friend to help me out he got the 35-35 so I took the measurement I got from him because it’s likely to be more accurate then mine so how much does this actually help me out with LL
Logged
It’s not a surgery for the faint hearted if you do it your stronger then you really believe

Valiant

  • Newbie
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Posts: 40

I did it twice on my own it was like 35 cm lower leg and 37 cm upper leg so I actually got a friend to help me out he got the 35-35 so I took the measurement I got from him because it’s likely to be more accurate then mine so how much does this actually help me out with LL

Tibia
https://m.

Femur
https://m.

Is this how you did it? As shown in the above videos.

The concern with LL is you don't want and try to avoid going outside the tibia/ femur ratios of 0.78(long femur) to 0.92(long Tibia) in the interests of preserving joint health. There was study which showed that a tibia/Femur ratio of 0.8 is most optimal for joint health and correlated with less joint pathology. If your measurements are  accurate, this means you have a femur to Tibia ratio of 1 or an extremely long tibia, so you can get away by lengthening your femur quite extensively and still be within in the 0.78- .0.92 ratio.

Based on your measurements, you could lengthen your femur by 8cm  to total length of 43cm which would put you in the  ratio of 0.81.
Logged

Moon knight

  • Jr. Member
  • *
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Posts: 125

Yea I did it like that plus it also works out to equal my inseam that I have which is another reason I believe it’s accurate
Logged
It’s not a surgery for the faint hearted if you do it your stronger then you really believe

Valiant

  • Newbie
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Posts: 40

Yea I did it like that plus it also works out to equal my inseam that I have which is another reason I believe it’s accurate

When measuring inseam do you extend the measuring tape all the way to the floor or do you stop at your ankles?.

My combined length of femur and tibia is 79cm, but my inseam is 82cm.
Logged

Moon knight

  • Jr. Member
  • *
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Posts: 125

Overall it goes to 78 all the way if I measure to just my ankles it goes to 70 cm
Logged
It’s not a surgery for the faint hearted if you do it your stronger then you really believe

Bry

  • Jr. Member
  • *
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 126

Measuring like the video, I got 40cm tibias and 44cm femurs, my inseam is 80cm and height is 167cm.
That means my ratio is 0.91.

Now, if I length by 7cm, it will be like this

Height: 174cm
Inseam: 87cm

Femur: 51cm -> 0.78
Tibia: 47cm -> 1.06

AND my legs will represent 50% of my total height...


... fffffk! :c
Logged

Valiant

  • Newbie
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Posts: 40

Measuring like the video, I got 40cm tibias and 44cm femurs, my inseam is 80cm and height is 167cm.
That means my ratio is 0.91.

Now, if I length by 7cm, it will be like this

Height: 174cm
Inseam: 87cm

Femur: 51cm -> 0.78
Tibia: 47cm -> 1.06

AND my legs will represent 50% of my total height...


... fffffk! :c


Have you tried doing a mock up LL on ms paint?

Maybe you will look better than you think.
Logged

Bry

  • Jr. Member
  • *
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 126


Have you tried doing a mock up LL on ms paint?

Maybe you will look better than you think.

Not really, there is a pic of me here, from that I believe it's visible that I got long legs.

https://imgur.com/PPdy60J
Logged

Valiant

  • Newbie
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Posts: 40

Not really, there is a pic of me here, from that I believe it's visible that I got long legs.

https://imgur.com/PPdy60J

Hard to tell actually from this photo. I would say your torso looks long in this photo not your legs IMO. You need to take a pic from further away, preferably set your phone or camera on a table  or tripod mid body height and walk at least 3 metres away in distance from the camera.

 Something like this. This is my LL mockup.

https://m.imgur.com/g9zFpSB
Logged

..

  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 843

The concern with LL is you don't want and try to avoid going outside the tibia/ femur ratios of 0.78(long femur) to 0.92(long Tibia) in the interests of preserving joint health.

Where did you get these numbers?
Logged

Valiant

  • Newbie
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Posts: 40

Where did you get these numbers?

Aren't these the typical ranges for tibia/ femur ratios in majority of people?

I saw a lecture by Dr. Paley I think, on YouTube where he mentioned these figures and some members here described the same figures too.
Logged
Pages: [1] 2   Go Up