Children’s Fractures Flashcards

1
Q

What is the epidemiology of fractures in children?

A

25% of children injured every year = 10-25% of injuries are fractures
More common in boys

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2
Q

What is the distribution of fractures in children?

A

80% in upper limbs, 20% in lower limbs, 0.7% are open, 15% are physeal

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3
Q

What are fractures only found in children?

A

Greenstick, tours and plastic deformation

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4
Q

What are greenstick fractures?

A

Occur in young soft bones, bone bends and breaks

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5
Q

What are torus fractures?

A

Also called buckle fractures, one side a f bone is compressed and buckles but doesn’t break all the way through

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6
Q

What is plastic deformation?

A

Bend in bone without obvious fracture

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7
Q

What is the history of a fracture?

A

Mechanism, how high/fast, forces involved, predict injuries and exclude or confirm

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8
Q

What are you looking and feeling for when examining a patient?

A
Look = deformity, swelling, bruising, asymmetry 
Feel = point tenderness to correlate with x-ray
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9
Q

What makes up the neurovascular examination of a patient?

A

Colour, cap refill, temperature, O2 sats, pulse, sweating, sensation, skin wrinkling in water

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10
Q

What are some signs and tests that can be done during an examination?

A

Distal neurovascular assessment, OK sign, hitchhikers thumb, star fish sign

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11
Q

What causes fractures to displace?

A

Muscle action and gravity

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12
Q

What must be excluded in a child with a fracture?

A

Non accidental injury

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13
Q

What are some features of the history that may indicate non accidental injury?

A

History doesn’t match injury
Vague parental accounts or inconsistencies
Accusations that child did it deliberately
Delay in seeking help
Child dressed inappropriately for situation

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14
Q

What are some situations that may indicate a non accidental injury?

A

Fracture in child < 2 especially pre walking
Injuries in various stages of healing (especially burns and bruises)
More injuries than normal in a child of that age
Increased intracranial pressure in an infant
Suspected intra-abdominal trauma in young child

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15
Q

What are the basic principles for treatment of fractures?

A

Reduce, retain and rehabilitate

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16
Q

Why do children have reduced need for accurate reduction of fractures?

A

They have greater remodelling potential

17
Q

What is the most common modality used to stabilise fractures in children?

A

Plaster = above or below the knee/elbow

18
Q

How are diaphyseal fractures immobilised?

A

Above and below the joint

19
Q

How are metaphyseal fractures immobilised?

A

Only by immobilising adjacent joint

20
Q

What are the exceptions to the normal treatment principles?

A

Displaced intra-articular or growth plate fractures, open fractures

21
Q

What are some treatment methods used?

A
Palvik harness 
Gallows traction = 3 months - 3 year old
Thomas and Kendrick splints
Hip spica = allows early discharge
Flexible nailing for femur
22
Q

What is the Salter Harris classification for?

A

Physeal injuries

23
Q

What are the different levels of Salter Harris injuries?

A

Type 1 = complete physeal fracture with or without fracture
Type 2 = physeal fracture that extends through the metaphysis, producing a chip fracture of the metaphysis
Type 3 = physeal fracture that extends through epiphysis
Type 4 = physeal fracture plus epiphyseal and metaphyseal fractures
Type 5 = compression fracture of growth plate