Title: Pediatric Ankle
1Pediatric Ankle Foot Fractures
- Steven Frick, MD
- Original Authors Laura Phieffer, MD and Steven
Frick, MD March 2004 - New Author Steven Frick, MD Revised August 2006
2Pediatric Ankle Fractures
- 2nd most common site of physeal fractures in
children - Most occur between ages 10 - 15 y.o.
- boys gt girls
- direct and indirect mechanisms
3Ankle Anatomy
- all ligamentous structures attach distal to the
physis - ligaments are stronger than physis
- physeal injury more common
4Ankle Anatomy
- distal tibial ossification center appears between
6 - 24 months - distal fibular ossification center appears
between 9 - 24 months - medial malleolar extension begins
7 y.o. completes 10 y.o.
5Physeal Closure
- distal tibial physis closes 15 y.o.
girls 17 y.o. boys - asymmetric closure over 18 months
- closure distal fibular physis follows distal
tibial physeal closure by 12-24 months
6Distal Tibial Physeal Closure
7Age / Fracture Pattern
8Classification - Ankle Fractures
- Anatomic Salter-Harris
- high interobserver correlation
- correlated with outcomes
9Classification - Ankle Fractures
- Mechanism of injury
- Dias and Tachdjian
10Diagnosis - Ankle Fractures
- direct/indirect mechanisms
- acute/subacute
- subtle exam findings
- Differentiate sprain from nondisplaced fracture
by location of tenderness
11Diagnosis - Ankle Fractures
- Radiographs - AP, LAT, Mortise
- know normal anatomic variants
- Stress radiographs
- CT scan to assess articular involvement
- MRI role not yet well defined in acute injuries
12Accessory Ossification Centers Smooth Borders
13Treatment Considerations
- Location of fracture
- Mechanism of injury
- Degree of displacement
- Age of child (how much growth remains)
14Salter-Harris Type I fxs
- Typically occurs in younger pts
- seen with all mechanisms
(SI, SPF, SER, PEER) - Often missed initially (dx sprain)
- Xrays acute often normal except for soft
tissue swelling over physis - Xrays- subacute - reveal widening of physis-
healing
15Salter-Harris Type II fxs
- most common distal tibia fx type
- seen with all mechanisms
(SI, SPF, SER, PEER) - mechanism deduced by direction of dist tibial
epiphysis, type assoc fib fx, location of
metaphyseal spike
16Salter II Distal Tibia Fracture
17Salter-Harris Type I II fxs
- non-displaced fxs
- LLC x 3-4 wks gt SLWC x 3wks (SH I fxs can be
treated with SLWC x 3-4wks) - displaced fxs
- Avoid repeated attempts at CR
- LLC x 3wks gt SLC x 3wks gt SLWC
- Open reduction infrequently indicated
- Follow for growth arrest
18Healed Distal Tibial Physeal Fracture -2 things
make physes wider - healing fractures and rickets
19Salter-Harris Type I II fxs
- If CR is incomplete, how much residual
displacement is acceptable? - Caruthers and Crenshaw AJS 1955
- accurate reposition of the displaced epiphysis
at the expense of forced or repeated manipulation
or operative intervention is not indicated
20Salter-Harris Type I II fxs
- If CR is incomplete, how much residual
displacement is acceptable? - Spiegel et al JBJS 1978
- correlated SH classification with risk of
shortening, angular deformity and joint
incongruity - recommend precise anatomical reduction
21Salter-Harris Type I II fxs
- Differing opinions regarding indication for open
reduction for interposition of periosteum gt
widening with minimal angulation - Kling et al 1984
- Phieffer, Wattenbarger et al 2000- animal model
- Mubarak et al 2005 believe interposed periosteum
leads to growth disturbance
22Closed reduction with incomplete reduction
because of interposed soft tissues removed at
ORIF
23Salter-Harris Type I II fxs
- displaced subacute (gt7-10 days out) fxs
- Residual displacement probably best accepted
- If growth does not sufficiently correct malunion,
corrective osteotomy performed
24Salter-Harris Type III IV fxs
- Mechanism of injury similar for both fx patterns
(typically supination-inversion) - Usually produced by medial corner of talus being
driven into the junction of distal tibial
articular surface and the medial malleolus - Can see central and lateral fx patterns
25Kling et.al., JBJS 84
- 33 fractures of the distal tibial physis
- Most SH types III and IV
- 19 tx with ORIF
- 9 treated with closed methods
- 0 bone bridges in ORIF group
- 5 of 9 closed tx formed physeal bars
- Recommended anatomic reduction of physis
26Salter-Harris Type III IV fxs
- Treatment and prognosis are similar
- Medial pattern appears to be at higher risk for
developing partial growth arrest gt varus
deformity - Spiegel et al JBJS 1978
- Kling et al JBJS 1984
- Caterini et al Foot Ankle 1991
27Salter-Harris Type III IV fxs
- non-displaced fxs (lt1 mm)
- LLC x 3-4 wks gt SLWC x 3wks
- CT after cast placement to assess displacement
- Weekly xrays in cast for first 3 weeks to assure
no displacement - Percutaneous fixation also option
- Follow for growth arrest
28Salter III Injury- CRIF
29Salter-Harris Type III IV fxs
- displaced fxs (gt2 mm)
- Anatomical reduction
- CR under GA if continued gt 2 mm displacement gt
open reduction - Open reduction, epiphyseal fixation parallel to
growth plate if much growth remaining - Postop LLC x 3-4 wks gt SLWC x 3wks
30Salter IV Distal Tibia Fracture
Fixation avoids physis
31Salter-Harris Type III IV fxs
- subacute displaced fxs
- Accept up to 2 mm displacement
- gt2mm displacement gt recommend reduction
regardless of time from injury with debridement
and interposition graft if necessary (goal to
restore joint congruity)
32Delayed diagnosis Salter IV medial malleolus
fracture in 6 yo multitrauma patient
- initial radiographs 15 days out from injury
33Anterior Approach
- ORIF 16 days after injury
34Note growth slowdown line parallels physis and
increased distance between markers normal growth
- nine months post-operative
35Salter-Harris Type V fxs
- Crush injury to physis
- No associated displacement
- Diagnosis made with follow-up xrays revealing
premature physeal closure - treatment directed primarily at sequelae of
growth arrest
36High Energy Injuries to Distal Tibia
- Uncommon
- Severe injury to distal tibial articular surface
poor prognosis - Restore articular surface if possible
- Length and alignment bridging external fixation
can be helpful
37High energy distal tibia fracture/subluxation in
11 year old female in MVC
38C T scan demonstrates significantly comminuted
articular surface and anterior subluxation of
talus
39Intraop views bridging external fixation and
ORIF with pin fixation
40One Year Follow Up
4112 Year Old High Velocity GSW loss of tibial
epiphysis/anterior soft tissues/tendons -
bridging ex fix-latissimus free flap ankle
fusion
42Transitional Fractures
- fxs occurring during asymmetric closure of distal
tibial physis - Triplane fx
- 2,3 or 4-part fxs
- lateral more common
- Juvenile Tillaux fx
43Transitional Fractures
- Triplane fx
- tend to be seen in younger pts than pts with
Juvenile Tillaux fx - more displacement/swelling more severe
- Treatment decisions usually based on articular
displacement
44Transitional Fractures
- Triplane fx - results
- overall results are good following adequate
reduction - VonLaer JBJS 1985
- Clement and Warlock JBJS 1987
- good early results
- Erlt et al JBJS 1988
- decline in results over time
45Transitional Fractures
- non-displaced Triplane fxs
- LLC, knee flexed 30?, foot IR x3wks gt SLWC
x3-4wks - CT after cast placement to assure no displacement
- Weekly xrays in cast for first 3 weeks to assure
no displacement in cast - FU xrays obtained every 6 months for 2 to 3 yrs
46Transitional Fractures
- displaced fxs Triplane (gt2 mm)
- Anatomical reduction
- CR achieved gt LLC, 30?KF, foot IR
- CR unsuccessful gt OR
- Reduction/internal fixation done in step-wise
fashion with small frag or 4.0 cannulated screws - Postop - SLC x 3-4wks gt SLWC x 3wks
47Transitional Fractures
- Juvenile Tillaux fxs
- tend to be older than pts with triplane fx
- Fibula prevents marked displacement/swelling may
be subtle - Local tenderness at ant-lat joint line
- Mortise view essential
- Although literature based on small pt series,
excellent results with anatomic reduction noted
48Transitional Fractures
- non-displaced Tillaux fxs
- LLC, knee flexed 30?, foot IR x3wks gt SLWC
x3-4wks - CT scan after cast placement to assure no
displacement - Weekly radiographs in cast for first 3 weeks to
assure no displacement in cast - FU xrays obtained every 6 months for 2 to 3 yrs
49Transitional Fractures
- displaced (gt2mm) Tillaux fxs
- Anatomical reduction
- CR achieved gt LLC, 30?KF, foot IR
- CR unsuccessful gt OR for CR, unsuccessful gt
k-wires to joystick Tillaux fragment
(percutaneously or open) - Fixation with small frag or 4.0 cannulated screw,
can cross physis - Postop - SLC x3-4wks gt SLWC x3wks
50Juvenile Tilleaux Fracture-ORIF
51Other Distal Tibial Fractures
- Injury to accessory ossification centers
- Treatment SLWC 3-4 weeks
- Ogden and Lee JPO 1990
- Good results 26/27 pts with injuries involving
the medial side - 5/11 pts with injuries involving the lateral side
had persistent sxs requiring excision
52Distal Fibular Fractures
- typically SH I or II fxs (sup-inversion)
- when isolated typically minimally displaced gt
SLWC 3-4 wks - significant displacement occurs with SH III and
IV distal tibial fxs, usually reduces with
tibial reduction - if remains unstable after tibial fixation gt fix
with smooth intramedullary or oblique k-wires
53Salter I Distal Fibula typical goose egg
swelling over distal fibula with tenderness over
distal fibular physis
54Pediatric Ankle Sprains
- should be diagnosis of exclusion
- Where is tenderness over bone/physis or ankle
ligaments? - often represent missed Salter I ankle fractures,
non-displaced calcaneal fractures - follow-up persistent pain
55Prognosis - Ankle Fractures
- mechanism of injury
- distal tibial physis medial lesions
- presence of residual articular step off
- presence fibular fx no prognostic significance
56Complications - Ankle Fractures
- growth arrest
- associated with SH III and IV fxs (medial)
- few series report high rate with SH II fxs
- 6 to 18 months after injury (as late as 2 yrs
after injury)
57Complications - Ankle Fractures
- growth arrest
- occur in fx treated operatively and non-op
- radiographic Harris growth lines - allow for
earlier intervention. Look for in x-rays 6-12
weeks - LLD tolerated well, angular deformity less well
tolerated
58Complications - Ankle Fractures
- arthritis
- malunion
- delayed/nonunion
- AVN distal tibial epiphysis-rare
5910 Year Old - 3 Months after Distal Tibia Fracture
60CT Anterior Central Bar
61Summary - Ankle Fractures
- Heterogenous group of fractures
- Age dependent
- Important to have high index of suspicion to
avoid missing diagnosis - Correlate PE and xray findings
- followed until skeletally maturity
- may develop late sequelae
62Pediatric Foot Fractures
- often missed diagnosis
- reductions of fractures important
- less remodeling potential
- reach 50 of mature length of foot bones by 18
mo. (compared to femur/tibia - do not reach until
3 y.o.)
63Pediatric Foot Fractures
- types of foot injuries1
- metatarsal fractures 90
- phalangeal fractures 18
- navicular fractures 5
- talar fractures 3
- calcaneal fractures 3
- cuboid fractures 2
- 1data from Cleveland Fracture Service, A.Crawford
(Skeletal Trauma)
64Pediatric Foot Anatomy
- hindfoot talus, calcaneus
- midfoot navicular, cuboid, 3 cuneiforms
- forefoot 5 metatarsals (distal epiphyses except
for 1st MT - proximal epiphysis), 14 phalanges
(proximal epiphysis) - variable number of sesamoids/accessory ossicles
- distal 1st MT pseuodoepiphysis may occur
65Pediatric Accessory Ossicles
66Radiographs
- AP, lateral, oblique XR of foot
- AP, lateral, oblique XR of ankle as well
- co-existent unrecognized fractures of distal
tibia/fibula occur in up to 8
67Pediatric Talus Fractures
- rare injury
- neck fractures most common with apex plantar
angulation - angulation lt 30 acceptable
- gt 30 angulation requires reduction under general
anesthesia - displaced (gt2mm)fractures require ORIF
- monitor 1 year for possible AVN (rare)
68Hawkins 2 talar neck fx, distal fibular avulsion
fxORIF both
69Pediatric Talus Fractures
- lateral/medial process fractures
- rarely displace
- symptomatic treatment only
- non-unions rare, asymptomatic if they occur
70Displaced talar neck /medial malleolar
fracturesAVN at follow-up
71Pediatric Talus Fractures
- osteochondral fractures
- inversion/plantar flexion injury gt posteromedial
lesion (more common) - eversion/dorsiflexion injury gtanterolateral
lesion - often requires MRI for diagnosis
- undisplaced lesion gt NWB in cast
- displaced lesion gt excision/currettage
72Ankle sprain that didnt heal-anterolateral
talar OCD
73Peritalar Dislocations in Children
- extremely rare injury (case reports only)
- represents dislocation of subtalar and
talonavicular joint - four types (medial - most common, lateral,
anterior, posterior) based on direction of foot - adults - associated with displaced talar neck fx
versus in children - isolated dislocations more
common
74Peritalar Dislocations in Children
- often see associated foot fracture
- attempt closed reduction
- open reductions associated with ultimate
decreased ROM - associated intra-articular fracture of
talonavicular joint adversely affects outcome - no reported cases of associated AVN
75Pediatric Calcaneal Fractures
- rare
- result of significant falls
- 5 associated with lumbar spine injuries
- often missed diagnosis
- XR difficult to diagnosis if non-displaced
- bone scan can confirm diagnosis
76Pediatric Calcaneal Fractures
- non-displaced injuries - elevate, NWB cast when
soft tissue swelling subsides - displaced injuries
- treat soft tissues first with elevation
- ORIF when soft tissues amenable
77Tarsal-metatarsal Injuries
- direct/indirect mechanisms of injury
- represent significant force
- if see fx of base of 2nd MT - implies more severe
injury - if see associated cuboid fx - implies dislocation
- treatment - requires anatomic reduction
- treat soft tissues first with elevation
- closed reduction/pinning vs. ORIF
78Pediatric Metatarsal Fractures
- most common childrens foot fracture
- usually result of direct trauma
- metatarsal shaft fractures most common
- lateral displacement - acceptable
- dorsal/plantar angulation not acceptable,
requires closed reduction/pinning
79Pediatric Metatarsal Fractures
- metatarsal base fractures
- require significant force
- consider early fasciotomy if significant
swelling/venous congestion in toes (no reported
compartment pressures to guide, clinical judgment)
80Pediatric Metatarsal Fractures
- metatarsal neck fractures (growth plate injury)
- growth inhibition unusual, overgrowth more common
- treatment SLWC
- if significant displacement - skeletal traction
until swelling subsides then percutaneous pinning - avoid open reductions
81Pediatric Metatarsal Fractures
- 1st metatarsal fractures
- can see buckle fracture just distal to proximal
physis (treatment - SLWC) - do not confuse pseudoepiphysis at distal end with
fracture
82Pediatric Metatarsal Fractures
- 5th metatarsal fractures
- proximal metaphyseal transverse fractures most
common - treatment SLWC
- distinguish from Jones fractures
- occurs in proximal diaphysis
- older children (15 - 20 y.o.)
- do not confuse os vesalianum (os peronei) with
fracture (oblique orientation proximally)
83Pediatric Phalangeal Fractures
- 18 childrens foot fractures
- 2/3 involve proximal phalanges
- 1/3 middle phalanges
- rare distal phalages
- treatment - traction, closed reduction, buddy
taping, hard sole shoe - open injures require ID/IV abx coverage
- osteomyelitis can occur
84Pediatric Phalangeal Fractures
- great toe distal phalangeal fractures
- beware of crush injuries
- may represent open fractures
- if suspect open injury, treat with ID/Abx to
avoid complication of osteomyelitis
85Lawnmower Injuries
- probably most common cause of open fractures in
children - most children are a rider or bystander (70)
- high complication rate - infection, growth
arrest,amputation - gt 50 unsatisfactory results (Loder)
86Lawnmower Foot Injury
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90Lawnmower Injuries
- Education/ Prevention key
- Children lt 14 - shouldnt operate keep out
of yard - No riders other than mower operator
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