Aims. Management of displaced paediatric
Aims.
We report 33 cases of femoral
Aims. We aimed to identify the pattern of nerve injury associated with
paediatric
Aims. We set out to determine if there is a difference in perioperative outcomes between early and delayed surgery in paediatric supracondylar humeral fractures in the absence of vascular compromise through a systematic review and meta-analysis. Materials and Methods. A literature search was performed, with search outputs screened for studies meeting the inclusion criteria. The groups of early surgery (ES) and delayed surgery (DS) were classified by study authors. The primary outcome measure was open reduction requirement. Meta-analysis was performed in the presence of sufficient study homogeneity. Individual study risk of bias was assessed using the Risk of Bias in Non-Randomised Studies – of Interventions (ROBINS-I) criteria, with the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations (GRADE) criteria used to evaluate outcomes independently. Results. A total of 12 studies met the inclusion criteria (1735 fractures). Pooled mean time to surgery from injury was and 10.7 hours for ES and 91.8 hours for DS. On meta-analysis there was no significant difference between ES versus DS for the outcome of open reduction requirement. There was also no significant difference for the outcomes: Iatrogenic nerve injury, pin site infection, and re-operation. The quality of evidence for all the individual outcomes was low or very low. Conclusions. There is no evidence that delaying
The aim of this retrospective multicentre study was to report the continued occurrence of compartment syndrome secondary to paediatric supracondylar humeral fractures in the period 1995 to 2005. The inclusion criteria were children with a closed, low-energy
It is unclear whether there is a limit to the amount of distal bone required to support fixation of
Between January 1995 and December 2000, 112 children with a closed displaced
We examined differences in the rate of open reduction, operating time, length of hospital stay and outcome between two groups of children with displaced
Recent reports have suggested that a delay in the management of type-III
We compared two management strategies for the perfused but pulseless hand after stabilisation of a Gartland type III
We describe a method of pinning extension
We tested the hypothesis that children who sustain a
A series of 26 children was referred to our specialist unit with a ‘pink pulseless hand’ following a
Filling the empty holes in peri-articular locking
plates may improve the fatigue strength of the fixation. The purpose of
this in vitro study was to investigate the effect
of plugging the unused holes on the fatigue life of peri-articular distal
femoral plates used to fix a comminuted
Symptoms due to a
This annotation discusses the findings of two papers in the current issue describing the management of the neurovascular complications of
In 1980, we developed a specially designed brace for treating
Between 1998 and 2002, 37 neuropathies in 32 patients with a displaced
We performed an audit of 71 children with consecutive displaced, extension-type
Cubitus varus is the most common complication of
We present a method of manipulative reduction, immobilisation and fixation using a U-shaped plaster with the elbow in extension for extension-type
Nine children sustained a second fracture of the distal humerus after union of an ipsilateral
We treated 22 children with a
Three cases are described of elbow injuries in infants, to illustrate the difficulty of differentiating a dislocation from a
This study aimed to evaluate the use of pin leverage in the reduction of Gartland type III
We report the results of 116 consecutive displaced extension
1. During two years eighty-five children with
1. Reduction of
Four cases are shown to illustrate remodelling of the lower end of the humerus after
We reviewed 26 patients who had had internal fixation of an open intra-articular
At operation for the correction of cubitus varus by removal of a wedge based laterally, the radial nerve fortunately was first explored and found to run through a transverse bony tunnel at the posterior level of a
1. A method of internal fixation for the
Displaced extension
We have reviewed 34 children who had been treated by open reduction through a medial incision and transarticular pinning for a severely displaced
Stable fixation after a corrective
Ninety-eight children with severely displaced
We reviewed 27 patients who had
A simple method of radiological assessment has been used to measure the angle between the long axis of the humeral shaft and the growth plate of the capitellum (the Baumann angle). In the normal arm a significant relationship was found between the Baumann angle and the carrying angle. The Baumann angle was also measured after reduction of
1. A method of treatment of displaced
1. A case, believed to be the fifth on record, of
During a six-year period we prospectively studied eight children who presented with
The management of an anterior
Cubitus varus is the most frequent complication
following the treatment of supracondylar humeral fractures in children.
We investigated data from publications reporting on the surgical
management of cubitus varus found in electronic searches of Ovid/MEDLINE
and Cochrane Library databases. In 894 children from 40 included
studies, the mean age at initial injury was 5.7 years (3 to 8.6)
and 9.8 years (4 to 15.7) at the time of secondary correction. The four
osteotomy techniques were classified as lateral closing wedge, dome,
complex (multiplanar) and distraction osteogenesis. A mean angular
correction of 27.6º (18.5° to 37.0°) was achieved across all classes
of osteotomy. The meta-analytical summary estimate for overall rate
of good to excellent results was 87.8% (95% CI 84.4 to 91.2). No technique
was shown to significantly affect the surgical outcome, and the
risk of complications across all osteotomy classes was 14.5% (95%
CI 10.6 to 18.5). Nerve palsies occurred in 2.53% of cases (95%
CI 1.4 to 3.6), although 78.4% were transient. No one technique
was found to be statistically safer or more effective than any other. Cite this article:
Of 48 consecutive children with Gartland III
supracondylar fractures, 11 (23%) had evidence of vascular injury,
with an absent radial pulse. The hand was pink and warm in eight
and white and cold in the other three patients. They underwent colour-coded
duplex scanning (CCDS) and ultrasound velocimetry (UV) to investigate
the patency of the brachial artery and arterial blood flow. In seven
patients with a pink pulseless hand, CCDS showed a displaced, kinked
and spastic brachial artery and a thrombosis was present in the
other. In all cases UV showed reduced blood flow in the hand. In
three patients with a white pulseless hand, scanning demonstrated
a laceration in the brachial artery and/or thrombosis. In all cases,
the fracture was reduced under general anaesthesia and fixed with
Kirschner wires. Of the seven patients with a pink pulseless hand
without thrombosis, the radial pulse returned after reduction in
four cases. The remaining three underwent exploration, along with
the patients with laceration in the brachial artery and/or thrombosis. We believe that the traditional strategy of watchful waiting
in children in whom the radial pulse remains absent in spite of
good peripheral perfusion should be revisited. Vascular investigation
using these non-invasive techniques that are quick and reliable
is recommended in the management of these patients. Cite this article: