Perthes Disease (Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease)
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
Childhood femoral head osteonecrosis of unknown etiology, which can weaken the femoral head and produce a permanent deformity in some patients, predisposing them to early osteoarthritis
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- 0 to 15 cases per 100,000 children <15 years of age
- In United States and Canada, about 5 per 100,000
- Rare in persons of African descent
- Most common in children 4 to 8 years old
- 3 to 5 times more common in boys than girls
- 10–15% develop bilateral disease either sequentially or concurrently.
ETIOLOGY
- Unknown
- Unlikely genetic transmission, as <5% have family history
- Many theories:
- Multifactorial (genetic predisposition with environmental trigger)
- Hyperactivity and subclinical trauma
- Type II collagenopathy
- Thrombophilia (factor V Leiden)
- Smoke exposure
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- A partial or complete disruption of femoral head blood supply produces a partial or total femoral head osteonecrosis.
- The greater the head involvement, the worse the prognosis
- Bone necrosis and subsequent necrotic bone resorption weaken the femoral head and make it susceptible to deformation.
- Excessive weight bearing and activities worsen the deformity.
- Chronic hip joint synovitis also develops producing pain and restriction of motion.
- Necrotic head goes through four radiographic stages of healing over 3 to 5 years:
- 1. Stage of avascular necrosis: smaller femoral head epiphysis with increased radiodensity
- 2. Stage of fragmentation: Necrotic epiphysis shows fragmentation. Necrotic bone is resorbed, weakening the head. Most deformity occurs during this stage, which lasts 1 to 2 years.
- 3. Stage of reossification: New bone begins to fill the epiphysis; longest stage, lasting up to 5 years
- 4. Healed: Head is completely reossified. Not all heads heal back in round shape, and deformed heads increase the risk of arthritis later.
COMMONLY ASSOCIATED CONDITIONS
- Delayed bone age
- Hyperactivity or attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
- Exposure to smoking
- Genitourinary anomalies (hypospadias, undescended testis, and inguinal hernia)
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Citation
Cabana, Michael D., editor. "Perthes Disease (Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease)." 5-Minute Pediatric Consult, 9th ed., Wolters Kluwer, 2025. Pediatrics Central, peds.unboundmedicine.com/pedscentral/view/5-Minute-Pediatric-Consult/617545/all/Perthes_Disease__Legg_Calve_Perthes_Disease_.
Perthes Disease (Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease). In: Cabana MDM, ed. 5-Minute Pediatric Consult. Wolters Kluwer; 2025. https://peds.unboundmedicine.com/pedscentral/view/5-Minute-Pediatric-Consult/617545/all/Perthes_Disease__Legg_Calve_Perthes_Disease_. Accessed June 14, 2026.
Perthes Disease (Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease). (2025). In Cabana, M. D. (Ed.), 5-Minute Pediatric Consult (9th ed.). Wolters Kluwer. https://peds.unboundmedicine.com/pedscentral/view/5-Minute-Pediatric-Consult/617545/all/Perthes_Disease__Legg_Calve_Perthes_Disease_
Perthes Disease (Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease) [Internet]. In: Cabana MDM, ed. 5-Minute Pediatric Consult. Wolters Kluwer; 2025. [cited 2026 June 14]. Available from: https://peds.unboundmedicine.com/pedscentral/view/5-Minute-Pediatric-Consult/617545/all/Perthes_Disease__Legg_Calve_Perthes_Disease_.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
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T1 - Perthes Disease (Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease)
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BT - 5-Minute Pediatric Consult
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5-Minute Pediatric Consult

