Title: Pediatric Orthopedic Emergencies
1- Pediatric Orthopedic Emergencies
- Tracy Merrill MD
Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine
Childrens Healthcare of Atlanta at Egleston
and Emory University School of Medicine
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2The Limping Child
- 4 year old child presents to the emergency
department with a chief complaint of limping for
two days - No report of trauma
- Afebrile
- No additional systemic symptoms
- PMH negative for joint problems or chronic
disease - Nontender to palpation and no pain with passive
ROM but limps when bears weight - Differential?
- Workup?
3Transient Synovitis - Definition
- Also known as irritable hip or toxic
synovitis - The 1 cause of acute hip pain in children
- Benign self limited disease of uncertain etiology
most commonly affecting the hip joint - Usually occurs in children age 3 to 10 years
- 4 cases in adults have been reported
- Almost always unilateral
- Causes pain and limitation of the movement of the
hip, with or without an effusion - Pain is the worst when walking, usually presents
with a limp or refusal to bear weight
4Transient Synovitis Etiology, Treatment
- Due to transient sterile inflammation of the
synovium of the hip - No clear precipitants, ?post viral
- Sudden onset, gradual resolution
- Self limited, usually lasts 4-7 days
- Treated with OTC analgesics ibuprofen and
tylenol - Study done showed ibuprofen decreased median
duration of symptoms from 4.5 days to 2 days - No residual long term deficits
- Most important thing to do is distinguish it from
septic arthritis
5Septic Arthritis - Definition
- Results from bacterial invasion of the joint
space - Can occur at any age but 50 of cases reported
occur in children under the age of 3 years - Acute onset
- Usually monoarticular
- Usually the large peripheral joints
- Organisms can invade the joint by three possible
mechanisms - Usually through hematogenous seeding
- Adjacent osteomyelitis
- Direct inoculation from a penetrating wound
6Septic Arthritis - Bugs
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Streptococcus
- GBS
- S pneumoniae
- S pyogenes
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae
- Haemophilus influenzae
7Septic Arthritis - Presentation
- Most commonly involves the hip joint septic
coxitis - Symptoms include
- Fever
- Joint pain
- Limp and an inability to bear weight
- Pain with active or passive range of motion
- Joint swelling, effusion, warmth, tenderness
- The patient holds their leg in a flexed,
abducted, externally rotated position
8Septic Arthritis - Presentation
- May be extremely difficult to diagnose in infants
and nonverbal children - Fever, irritability, and decreased po intake may
be your only clues - May fuss more when handled due to movement of the
affected extremity - May have decreased movement of an extremity
- Predisposing factors include recent URI or
otitis, skin or soft tissue infections, traumatic
puncture wounds, femoral venipunctures,
underlying chronic disease, or immunosuppression
9Septic Arthritis - Differential
- Differential can include
- Transient synovitis
- Viral arthritis
- Traumatic arthritis
- Periarticular cellulitis
- Osteomyelitis
- JRA
- Acute rheumatic fever (JONES criteria)
- Lyme disease
- Post-infectious reactive arthritis
- Oncologic process (eg. leukemia, osteosarcoma)
10Septic Arthritis - Diagnosis
- Laboratory
- CBC with diff shows elevated white count with a
left shift - Blood cultures are positive 40-50 of the time
- CRP elevated
- ESR elevated
- Joint aspiration shows elevated WBCs
10,000-250,000 (normal is less than 200), gt75
segs, and decreased glucose - Imaging
- Plain films may show a displacement or blurring
of periarticular fat pads as well as an increased
hip joint space - MRI
11Septic Arthritis - Diagnosis
- Study done by Jung, et al. (2003) found five
predictors that correlated with a high
probability of septic arthritis to help
distinguish from transient synovitis whose
presentation can be similar - Temperature gt37 degrees Celsius (37.7 vs. 36.6)
- WBC gt11,000/mL (18.2 vs. 8.2)
- CRP gt1mg/dL (10.1 vs. 0.66)
- ESR gt20mm/h (79.2 vs. 20.3)
- Joint space difference gt2mm between the affected
and unaffected sides (difference of 4.0mm vs.
1.2mm) - No significant difference found in platelet count
12Septic Arthritis - Treatment
- Treatment
- Prompt orthopedic consultation
- Surgical debridement of the hip through
arthrotomy - Hospitalization until fever defervescence and
signs of clinical improvement post operatively - Intravenous antibiotics for 4 weeks
- Usually requires central line placement for home
administration of antibiotics
13Septic Arthritis - Treatment
- Antibiotic Therapy
- lt2 months of age oxacillin or nafcillin plus
gentamicin for Gram negatives - 2 months to 3 years ampicillin-sulbactam or
ceftriaxone - gt3years oxacillin, nafcillin, or ceftriaxone
- Adjust based on gram stain and culture results
- Consider Clinda or Vanc if suspect MRSA
14Septic Arthritis - Outcomes
- Complications
- Osteomyelitis, osteonecrosis
- Avascular necrosis due to the pressure on blood
vessels and cartilage in the femoral head area - Epiphyseal separation
- Pathologic dislocation
- Growth arrest and subsequent leg length
discrepancies up to several inches - Sepsis
15Septic Arthritis - Outcomes
- Prognosis
- Joint destruction can occur within days leading
to longterm disability, residual deformity,
arthritis, and decreased range of motion - Prior to the discovery of antibiotics, pediatric
mortality rates averaged 50 - If diagnosed early before changes seen on plain
films, have an improved prognosis - Note that joint destruction as a result of
gonococcal infection is uncommon
16SCFE Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis
- An acquired growth plate injury
- The separation of the proximal femoral epiphyses
from the metaphysis at the level of the growth
plate - Most commonly occurs in adolescents and
preadolescents who are vulnerable to slippage due
to widened and weakened growth plates during
periods of rapid growth - Occurs in 2-10 per 100,000 adolescents in the US
- Peak age is 10-13 in females and 12-16 in males
- Rarely occurs after menarche
- More common in males, male to female ratio is 2.5
1.6 - More common in Pacific Islanders and African
Americans
17SCFE - Etiology
- The epiphysis is located at the top of the femur
and is connected to the metaphysis via the physis
or growth plate - The head of the femur stays within the acetabulum
while the femur slips - Occurs when the shearing stress exerted onto the
femoral head is greater than the resistance
provided by the physis - Occurs in the hypertrophic zone, the weakest zone
of the physis
18SCFE - Risk Factors
- Obesity resulting in mechanical overload of an
immature growth plate, 81 of cases are in
children over the 95th percentile for BMI - Local trauma
- Hypothyroidism
- Panhypopituitarism
- Growth hormone administration
- Renal osteodystrophy
- Previous radiation therapy
19SCFE - Presentation
- Limp
- Hip, groin, thigh, or knee pain
- Hip pain often referred to the knee due to the
pathways of the obturator and femoral nerves - 15 of patients report pain only in the distal
thigh and medial knee - If stable, can still bear weight
- As the slip progresses, eventually get external
rotation of the toes when walking - Decreased range of motion of the hip
- If chronic or unrecognized, may develop atrophy
of the thigh and gluteal muscles - A stable chronic slip may suddenly worsen and
become unstable with what seems like minor trauma
20SCFE - Diagnosis
- Radiography bilateral A/P and frog leg x-rays
of the hips - Ice cream falling off the cone the femoral head
is the ice cream that falls off the femur which
is the cone
21SCFE Grades of severity
22SCFE - Treatment
- Screw fixation under fluoro to prevent further
slippage - Strict non weight bearing leading up to surgery
and then partial for 6-8 weeks after surgery - Never attempt to reduce the slip during surgery
or will increase the risk of avascular necrosis - For severe slips, a corrective osteotomy may be
required
23SCFE - Treatment
- Technically only need fixation until the growth
plate fuses but would be too invasive to remove
the screw, so they are usually left in unless
complications develop - Some will do prophylactic pinning of the contra-
lateral hip if at high risk for a bilateral slip - Casting or bracing not required postop
- Sports restrictions for 3-6 months
24SCFE - Complications
- Avascular necrosis altered blood supply to the
proximal femoral head and physis leading to bone
death, most commonly occurs in severe or unstable
slips, can lead to rapid hip deterioration and
severe progressive arthritis - Chondrolysis necrosis of the articular
cartilage, can progress to severe pain, decreased
range of motion, and contracture of the hip
25SCFE - Prognosis
- Occurs bilaterally in 25-40 of cases
- Most contralateral slips occur within 6-12 months
of the index case - Most stable or chronic SCFEs are treated
effectively with minimal complications, makes up
gt90 of all slips - The more severe the slippage, the more altered
are the mechanics of hip movement, and the sooner
the hip wears down, leading to premature
arthritis - The most severe cases may eventually require
total hip replacements
26Legg-Calve Perthes Disease
- Aseptic necrosis of the femoral head and neck
- Results from a disruption of the blood supply
- Onset usually between the ages of 4-8 years
- Male to female ratio of 51
- Bilateral in 10 of cases
- Present with a limp
- Pain may refer to the knee, medial thigh, or
groin along the distribution of the obturator
nerve - Exam reveals limited hip abduction and medial
rotation - More advanced cases may show leg length
shortening or thigh muscle atrophy
27Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease
- The exact cause is unknown but can be related to
anything that may damage the blood supply to the
hip
28Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease
- Radiographs show
- Smaller denser femoral head
- Relative osteopenia of the adjacent proximal
femur and pelvis - Widened joint space
- Subchondral lucent area
- Irregular physeal plate, fragmented in later
stages - Blurred and lucent metaphysis
- Confirm with MRI or bone scan
29Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease
- A temporary condition
- Occurs in 4 phases
- 1. From several months up to one year, blood
supply is absent, portions of the bone die, the
femoral head collapses and looses its shape - 2. From one to three years, the dead cells are
replaced with new bone cells - 3. Also from one to three years, the femoral head
begins to remodel and obtain its shape again - 4. Completion of the healing process
30Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease
- Treatment
- Rest, often with the aid of crutches, wheelchair
- Activity restrictions
- NSAIDS
- Traction, casting, or bracing to hold the femoral
head in the hip socket to preserve the round
shape of the femoral head during remodeling - Surgery to secure the femoral head in the hip
socket - Physical therapy to keep the hip muscles strong
and maintain range of motion - Complications
- Limited hip motion
- Leg length differences
- Arthritis long term
31Osgood-Schlatter Disease
- Tibial tubercle apophysitis
- Due to traction of the patellar ligament on the
tibial tuberosity - An overuse syndrome
- Occurs most frequently in boys age 11-15 years
who are active in sports - Pain to palpation of the tibial tubercle, pain
with quadriceps contraction - May have overlying soft tissue swelling
- Radiographs are either normal or may show an
irregular tibial tubercle with or without
fragmentation - Often mistaken for avulsion fractures
32Osgood-Schlatter Disease
- Self limited
- Cured by fusion of the tubercle
- Treatment is limitation of physical activity to
the point of pain tolerance and RICE - Rest
- Ice
- Compression with ace wrap or neoprene sleeve
- Elevate
- NSAIDS may help with acute pain exacerbations
33Osteomyelitis - Definition
- An infection of the bone
- 90 of cases involve a single bone
- Pathogens can spread to the bone from the blood
stream from distant infections, from direct
penetration from trauma, or from spread from
overlying soft tissue infections - Long bones of the lower extremity are the most
commonly affected from hematogenous seeding - Usually beneath the epiphyseal plates in the
rapid growth areas - Up to 25 may occur in short or nontubular bones
34Osteomyelitis - Bugs
- Staphylococcus aureus is the number one cause in
any age group! 70-90 of cases! - Haemophilus influenzae
- GBS and enteric rods in neonates
- Salmonella in sickle cell patients
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa in foot punctures
35Osteomyelitis - Presentation
- Symptoms
- Limp
- Difficulty bearing weight
- Bone pain, gradual onset, constant
- Infants are usually fussy, febrile, and may not
be moving all extremities equally - Fever over 38.5 C in up to 80 of patients
- Physical Exam
- Point tenderness on exam
- Local erythema and edema once purulent material
has ruptured through the bone cortex
36Osteomyelitis
37Osteomyelitis - Diagnosis
- Laboratory
- White blood cell count is normal in up to two
thirds of cases! - An elevated ESR is more sensitive, elevated in up
to 90 of cases, peaks at day 3-5 of treatment,
normalizes by 3 weeks - CRP is best for monitoring response to treatment,
elevated in up to 98 of cases, peaks at day 2 of
treatment, normalizes in as little as one week in
uncomplicated cases - Blood culture yields an organism in 30-50 of
cases - Bone aspiration for gram stain and culture yields
an organism in 50-70 of cases
38Osteomyelitis - Diagnosis
- Radiographs may be normal early in the course but
as bony destruction occurs, may see periosteal
reactions (in 3-10 days) or lytic lesions (in
10-12 days) - Technetium-99 bone scan will show areas of
increased blood flow due to inflammation,
sensitivity gt90 (note your bone scan wont be
affected by needle aspiration) - If have a poor treatment response, consider MRI
which can aid in finding drainable subperiosteal
abscesses - If have a pelvic osteomyelitis, consider MRI
early in the course of evaluation due to an
increased occurrence of abscesses in these cases,
or can use MRI to replace bone scan in the
diagnosis of these cases
39Osteomyelitis
40Osteomyelitis
41Osteomyelitis - Treatment
- All cases must be admitted for IV antibiotics
- Immediate orthopedic consultation is required for
surgical debridement and draining of any
subperiosteal abscesses - Total antibiotic course of 3-4 weeks, up to 6
weeks in complicated or extensive cases - Sickle cell patients who may have areas of poorly
perfused bone as well as immunocompromised
patients require longer treatment duration - Use the max dosage range listed for the
antibiotic chosen - IV route until clinical symptoms improved and
afebrile for at least 3-5 days - Can then complete treatment course with oral high
dose antibiotics
42Osteomyelitis - Treatment
- Antibiotic Therapy
- Anti-staphylococcal penicillins
- Oxacillin (and gentamicin) in neonates
- Nafcillin or oxacillin monotherapy in older
children - First generation cephalosporins
- Ancef (cefazolin)
- Clindamycin if suspect MRSA
- Vancomycin if clinda resistant or D test positive
for inducible clinda resistance - Linezolid as last resort for highly resistant
organisms
43Osteomyelitis - Outcomes
- Complications
- Bony and cartilaginous destruction
- Growth arrest
- Permanent deformity
- Sepsis
- Chronic or recurring osteomyelitis
- Prognosis
- Complications occur in only 5 of cases, usually
when there was a delay in diagnosis or treatment - Recurrences can occur up to 30 years later,
usually the same organism, often reactivated by
local trauma
44Compartment Syndrome
- Due to an increase in intracompartmental pressure
- From anything that decreases compartment size
- Tight closure of fascial defects
- Tight dressings or casts
- Or from anything that increases comparment
components - Bleeding from fractures or trauma
- Increased capillary permeability from burns
- Venous obstruction
- Muscle hypertrophy
- Can result in ischemic muscle necrosis and
subsequent contracture and dysfunction
45Compartment Syndrome
- The lower leg is most susceptible due to its
small fascial compartments - Irreversible muscle injury may occur in as little
as 6 hours from onset of ischemia - Diagnosis The Five Ps
- Pain out of proportion to the injury, exacerbated
by passive stretching of the muscle - Paresthesia
- Pallor
- Paralysis
- Pulselessness
46Compartment Syndrome
- Treatment
- Loosen all restrictive dressings or splints
- Direct measurement of compartment pressures if
pain not immediately relieved - Incisional release or fasciotomy required if any
compartment pressures are over 30mmHg
47Fractures Definitions
- Alignment refers to angulation or rotation of
the fracture fragments in reference to each other - Apposition refers to the amount of end to end
contact between the fractured bone fragments - Avulsion chip fracture, small fracture near a
joint that usually has a ligament or tendon
attached - Closed simple fracture, no overlying open
wound - Open compound fracture, open wound present
- Comminuted multiple fragments
- Dislocation luxation, disruption of the
continuity of a joint - Displaced the two bone ends are separated
- Epiphyseal involves the growth plate or
epiphysis - Greenstick incomplete fracture
- Impacted broken ends are driven into each other
- Intra-articular involves the joint surface of a
bone
48Fractures Definitions
- Delayed union slower than normal healing
- Malunion healing in an unsatisfactory position
- Nonunion failure of bone healing
- Occult cant see the fracture on the plain films
but other positive signs suggest a fracture such
as a posterior fat pad on a lateral elbow film - Pathologic due to an underlying bone weakness,
usually cysts, neoplasms, or metabolic bone
disease - Stress occurs when weak bone is stressed
normally or when normal bone is stressed
excessively, usually in weight bearing bones - Subluxation partial disruption of a joint, an
incomplete dislocation, most common in pediatrics
is nursemaid elbow - Torus buckle fracture, caused by compression
of the cortex, most commonly occurs in the distal
radius
49Pediatric Fractures
- Fractures in children differ from those in adults
- Nonunion is rare due to the active periosteum and
abundant blood supply surrounding the growing
bone - Continued bone growth after the fracture is
healed allows for correction of minor deformities - The closer the fracture is to the end of the bone
and the younger the patient, the greater the
amount of angulation that is acceptable - The distal radius may correct up to 10-15 degrees
per year - Side to side apposition is acceptable in long
bone fractures in boys under 12yrs and girls
under 10yrs
50Pediatric Fractures
- Slight shortening (overlapping of 2 bone ends) is
acceptable and may even be desirable in leg
fractures due to the acceleration of growth seen
after a displaced fracture, the tibia and femur
may overgrow up to 1cm - Exceptions
- Rotational malalignment will not correct itself
- Angulated midshaft fractures will not realign
- Sprains are rare in children under age 12 yrs, if
tenderness is present over a growth plate coupled
with overlying soft tissue swelling, assume a
fracture even if x-rays are negative
51Epiphyseal Fractures
- The epiphyseal plate consists of zones or layers
- Germinal cell layer, closest to the joint
- Zone of proliferation
- Zone of hypertrophic cartilage
- Zone of provisional calcification
- Most epiphyseal fractures occur through the
weakest zone, the zone of hypertrophic cartilage
52Epiphyseal Fractures
- Salter I and II fractures are transverse and do
not extend vertically across the germinal cell
layer, prognosis for normal healing is good - Salter III, IV, and V fractures extend vertically
across the growth plate and have the highest risk
for growth disruption and angular deformity,
accurate reduction is mandatory and often
requires surgery - Salter V fractures are crush injuries and have
the worst prognosis
53Pediatric Fractures
- Call orthopedics for all of the following
fractures - Open fractures, often require meticulous cleaning
and debridement to prevent infection - Femur fractures, require prolonged traction,
special casting, or surgery - Displaced supracondylar humerus fractures
- Salter III, IV, or V fractures (except fingers,
toes) - Any closed angulated or displaced fractures for
which reduction attempts are unsuccessful - Any injury involving neurovascular compromise or
signs of compartment syndrome
54Pediatric Fractures
- Immediate care when patient presents to the ER
- Elevate and ice
- Stabilize obvious fractures on an armboard, in a
sling, or on a stack of towels - NPO except for pain meds
- Pain control depending on severity
- IV Morphine
- PO Lortab
- Document last po intake
- Consent signed for sedation if has obvious
deformity - Assess neurovascular status distal to the injury
55Buckle Fractures
- Torus or buckle fracture of the distal radius
- The most common fracture in the pediatric
population - Occurs from a fall onto an outstretched hand
- May present a few days after the injury with mild
wrist pain - Stable fracture, treated mainly for comfort
- Treat with a lower arm sugartong splint in the ER
- Later get a short arm cast or a removable volar
wrist splint for 3-4 weeks
56Clavicle Fractures
- Occurs from a fall onto the shoulder or falling
onto an outstretched hand - Surgical correction only if open, skin tenting
present, comminuted, or has neurovascular injury - Better to accept angulation/deformity than to
attempt open reduction in most cases - The scar from an open reduction is usually more
displeasing to the patient and family than the
bony prominence of a malunion - Simple sling and swathe for 2-3 weeks or until
painfree
57Proximal Humerus Fractures
- Common between the ages of 9-15yrs
- Occurs from a fall onto the arm or a direct hit
- The proximal humeral growth plate has an amazing
ability to remodel - Reduction is only needed in patients near
skeletal maturity whose fracture has more than
50-70 degrees of angulation, in open fractures,
or if has neurovascular injury - Most common complication is axillary nerve
injury, test deltoid function and sensation
lateral deltoid - Immobilize in a simple sling for 3-4 weeks
- Gentle pendulum exercises and shoulder range of
motion exercises can be started in the second week
58Proximal Humerus Fractures
59Supracondylar Fractures
- Make up 60-80 of all pediatric elbow fractures
- Peak incidence ages 5-7 years
- Results from a fall with the elbow hyperextended,
the hyperextension forces the olecranon into the
olecranon fossa transmitting the force up into
the distal humeral metaphysis - The distal fragment is usually displaced
posteriorly - The anterior humeral line which should bisect the
capitellum, is malaligned anterior to the
capitellum - Has the highest complication rate of any
pediatric fracture including neurovascular
injury, compartment syndrome, and malunion - Vascular injury occurs in 2.5, most commonly
the brachial artery - Neuronal injury occurs in 17 of Type III
fractures, can affect the radial, median, or
ulnar nerve
60Supracondylar Fractures
- Type I is nondisplaced
- Type II is displaced partially with the posterior
periosteal hinge intact - Type III is displaced completely with no contact
between fracture fragments
61Supracondylar Fractures
- Type I can be treated with a posterior long arm
splint with the elbow in 90-110 degrees of
flexion, will later get a long arm cast for 3-4
weeks - Type II and III are usually treated with closed
reduction and percutaneous pinning
62Forearm Fractures
- The distal radius physis is the most commonly
injured physis in the body - Salter II fractures are the most common type of
radial physis injury - Most displaced fractures involve apex volar
angulation with the distal fracture fragment
being displaced dorsally
63Forearm Fractures
- Most distal forearm fractures can be treated with
closed reduction, but midshaft fractures are more
unstable and often require pinning or plate
fixation - Remodeling of the distal radius may correct up to
10-15 degrees of angulation per year - Therefore, angulation up to 30 degrees may be
accepted in children under the age of 10 years,
and up to 15 degrees in children older than 10
years as long as they have open physes - Remember, rotational deformities will not remodel
64Forearm Fractures
- Place a sugartong splint in the ER and then a
cast for 4-6 weeks - Most common complication is growth arrest, occurs
more commonly with difficult or open reductions
65Boxers Fracture
- Distal 4th or 5th metacarpal fractures
- Results from hyperflexion of the metacarpal neck
due to punching or hitting a hard object or wall - Treated with an ulnar gutter splint, then a cast
for 3-4 weeks - Never reduced in the ER, all go to ortho clinic
for follow up and have outpatient surgical repair
if residual dysfunction is present
66Femur Fractures
- 62 occur in the shaft of the femur or diaphysis
- One of the most common fractures in children
- The most common fracture requiring
hospitalization - Between the ages 1-6 yrs, usually due to falls
- Between the ages 6-9 yrs, usually due to auto vs.
ped - Over the age of 10 yrs, usually due to MVCs,
sports accidents - Under the age of 12 months or in any child who is
not yet walking, 80 are due to non accidental
trauma
67Femur Fractures
- Treatment is often age dependent
- Newborns to age 6 months Pavlik harness
- 6 months to 5-8 years spica cast
- 6-12 years
- Traction followed by a spica cast
- External fixation
- Flexible intramedullary nailing, no casting, just
a knee immobilizer needed post op, rods are
removed 9-12 months later - Skeletally mature with closed physes
- Rigid intramedullary locking nails
- Compression plate fixation
68Femur Fractures
69Femur Fractures
- Remodeling of an infant treated with Pavlik
harness
- Flexible intramedullary nailing in an older child
70Femur Fractures
- Rigid intramedullary interlocking nails
71Tibia Fractures
- 50 occur in the distal third of the tibia
- 39 occur in the midshaft region
- 30 have associated fibular fractures
- Due to falls, sports, MVCs, and auto vs
pedestrian accidents - Proximal third tibia fractures are rare but the
most complicated, tend to heal with a valgus
deformity, treated with a varus molded long leg
cast with knee flexed 10 degrees for 4-6 weeks,
some valgus deformities resolve spontaneously so
they arent surgically corrected unless persist
into adolescence
72Tibia Fractures
- Middle and distal third tibia fractures require
long leg splints in the ER followed by casting - Casting duration dependent on age
- Young children wear a long leg cast for 3-4 weeks
- Adolescents wear a long leg cast for 4 weeks,
then switch to a short leg cast for 4 weeks, then
an aircast walking boot for 4 weeks
73Toddlers Fracture
- Nondisplaced spiral fracture of the distal third
of the tibia - The most commonly identified fracture in
preschool-aged children presenting with a limp - Occurs from a fall that causes a twisting torque
on the lower leg - Typically seen in patients aged 1-3 years as they
are learning to walk, but can occur in children
as old as 6 years - Long-leg or below-the-knee walking cast for 3-4
weeks
74Ankle Fractures
- Ankle inversion/eversion injuries can cause
avulsion fractures of the lateral/medial
malleolus tips respectively, or distal fibular
physis fractures - Avulsion fractures of the distal medial or
lateral malleolus may persist radiographically
despite casting - Sometimes confused with a normal ossification
center, if tender with overlying soft tissue
swelling, treat as a fracture - Salter Harris I fractures of the distal fibula
account for 15 of pediatric ankle fractures,
often cannot be seen radiographically, it must be
presumed in a growing child with tenderness over
the physis
75Ankle Fractures
- Medial malleolus avulsion fracture
76Nursemaid Elbow
- Subluxation of the radial head due to a pulling
or sudden traction injury followed by entrapment
of the annular ligament between the radial head
and the capitellum - Age 1-5 years
- Left side more common
- Slightly higher incidence in girls
- Usually caused by someone lifting up a toddler by
the lower arm or when a child suddenly pulls away
or drops down while holding hands with a parent,
also occurs from swinging a child as in playing
airplane
77Nursemaid Elbow
- Presents with the arm hanging limp down by the
side, nontender to palpation, but the child
refuses to use the arm - Can reproduce pain with elbow flexion or
supination - Reduced by applying pressure to the lateral
aspect of the radial head while applying traction
to the lower arm followed by supination and
flexion at the elbow - This method works in 80-90 of cases
78Nursemaid Elbow
- An alternative method is hyperpronation at the
wrist - If unable to reduce, splint with elbow flexed at
90 degrees and send for orthopedic clinic follow
up - Often hear or feel a click
- Child usually cries briefly
- 10 minutes later the child is using it fully and
reaches for a toy or popsicle - No splinting or sling necessary
- Motrin or Tylenol for soreness
- Tends to recur in 26 of cases
79