Aims.
Between 2005 and 2010 ten consecutive children
with high-energy
Aims. Following the introduction of national standards in 2009, most
major paediatric trauma is now triaged to specialist units offering
combined orthopaedic and plastic surgical expertise. We investigated
the management of open tibia fractures at a paediatric trauma centre,
primarily reporting the risk of infection and rate of union. Patients and Methods. A retrospective review was performed on 61 children who between
2007 and 2015 presented with an open tibia fracture. Their mean
age was nine years (2 to 16) and the median follow-up was ten months
(interquartile range 5 to 18). Management involved IV antibiotics,
early debridement and combined treatment of the skeletal and soft-tissue injuries
in line with standards proposed by the British Orthopaedic Association. Results. There were 36 diaphyseal fractures and 25 distal tibial fractures.
Of the distal fractures, eight involved the physis. Motor vehicle
collisions accounted for two thirds of the injuries and 38 patients
(62%) arrived outside of normal working hours. The initial method
of stabilisation comprised: casting in nine cases (15%); elastic
nailing in 19 (31%); Kirschner (K)-wiring in 13 (21%); intramedullary
nailing in one (2%); open reduction and plate fixation in four (7%); and
external fixation in 15 (25%). Wound management comprised: primary
wound closure in 24 (39%), delayed primary closure in 11 (18%),
split skin graft (SSG) in eight (13%), local flap with SSG in 17
(28%) and a free flap in one. A total of 43 fractures (70%) were
Gustilo-Anderson grade III. There were four superficial (6.6%) and
three (4.9%) deep infections. Two deep infections occurred following
open reduction and plate fixation and the third after
K-wire fixation of a distal fracture. No patient who underwent primary
wound closure developed an infection. All the fractures united,
although nine patients required revision of a mono-lateral to circular
frame for delayed union (two) or for altered alignment or length
(seven). The mean time to union was two weeks longer in diaphyseal fractures
than in distal fractures (13 weeks versus 10.8
weeks, p = 0.016). Children aged >
12 years had
a significantly longer time to union than those aged <
12 years
(16.3 weeks versus 11.4 weeks, p = 0.045).
The length of stay in hospital for patients with a Gustilo-Anderson
grade IIIB fracture was twice as long as for less severe injuries. . Conclusion. Fractures in children heal better than those in adults. Based
on our experience of deep infection we discourage the use of internal
fixation with a plate for
We present two children with massive defects of the tibia and an associated active infection who were treated by medial transport of the fibula using the Ilizarov device. The first child had chronic discharging osteomyelitis which affected the whole tibial shaft. The second had sustained bilateral grade-IIIB
The use of recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 (rhBMP-2) for the treatment of congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia has been investigated in only one previous study, with promising results. The aim of this study was to determine whether rhBMP-2 might improve the outcome of this disorder. We reviewed the medical records of five patients with a mean age of 7.4 years (2.3 to 21) with congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia who had been treated with rhBMP-2 and intramedullary rodding. Ilizarov external fixation was also used in four of these patients. Radiological union of the pseudarthrosis was evident in all of them at a mean of 3.5 months (3.2 to 4) post-operatively. The Ilizarov device was removed after a mean of 4.2 months (3.0 to 5.3). These results indicate that treatment of congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia using rhBMP-2 in combination with intramedullary stabilisation and Ilizarov external fixation may improve the initial rate of union and reduce the time to union. Further studies with more patients and longer follow-up are necessary to determine whether this surgial procedure may significantly enhance the outcome of congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia, considering the refracture rate (two of five patients) in this small case series.