Literature DB >> 21425612

[Pediatric femur fractures, epidemiology and treatment].

Lazar Petković1, Igor Djan, Djordje Gajdobranski, Dusan Marić, Mirjana Petković.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND/AIM: Femur fractures in children most often occur as a consequence of traffic accidents, during play and sport activities, and due to different pathological states. Diagnosis is rather simple and it includes physical and radiographical examination. Femur fractures treatment in children can be operative and unoperative, depending on several facts: age, localisation and type of fracture, joint injuries of soft tissues, the presence of other injuries (in polytrauma), economical and social aspects, ect. The aim of this study was to present epidemiological characteristics of pediatric femur fractures, that is in the stage of development, including a special analysis of the used treatment techniques, as well as the comparison of the obtained data with those from the literature.
METHODS: The evaluation included following parameters: age, gender, cause, localisation and type of femur fracture, applied treatment and hospitalisation duration.
RESULTS: Among the presented 143 patients with femur fracture, 109 were boys and 34 were girls (3.2:1 ratio; p = 0.0001). Average age for both genders was 8.6 years, and no difference between boys and girls were found for the age (p = 0.758). In total, the most common fracture was diaphyseal fracture of femur in 93 (65.03%) patients. The second was proximal fracture in 30 (20.98%) patients, and the last distal fracture of the femur in 20 (13.99%) patients (p = 0.0001). Three main causes of femur fracture can be distinguished: during play and sport activities in 67 (46.8%) children, in traffic accidents in 64 (44.8%) children, and pathological fractures in 12 (8.4%) children. Inoperative treatment was applied in 82 (57.3%) patients, and operative one in 61 (42.7%) patients. The most common treatment was traction, in 71 (49.6%) patients, followed by immobilization by hip spica cast mostly in young children. Intramedullar elastic nailing was applied in 16 (11.2%) cases, and intra-medullar rigid nailing (Küntscher) in 19 (13.3%) cases. Significantly longer hospitalization period was detected after traction (21 days) comparing to other ways of treatment, mainly operative or hip spica cast (5 to 10 days).
CONCLUSION: In young children the standard treatment was hip spica cast after traction. Intramedullar elastic nailing is a modern trend accepted as standard in our approach to femur fracture treatment in children.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21425612     DOI: 10.2298/vsp1101009p

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vojnosanit Pregl        ISSN: 0042-8450            Impact factor:   0.168


  3 in total

1.  TEN versus external fixator in the management of pediatric diaphyseal femoral fractures: evaluation of the outcomes.

Authors:  Giuseppe Rollo; Pasquale Guida; Michele Bisaccia; Paolo Pichierri; Marco Filipponi; Riccardo Maria Lanzetti; Auro Caraffa; Alessandro Stasi; Valentina Russi; Domenico Lupariello; Luigi Meccariello
Journal:  Eur J Orthop Surg Traumatol       Date:  2018-04-20

2.  Transportation of pediatric femur fractures to a tertiary care center: a retrospective review.

Authors:  David Alexander; Joanna J Horstmann; Janet Walker; Vishwas Talwalkar; Henry Iwinski; Todd A Milbrandt
Journal:  Iowa Orthop J       Date:  2014

3.  Epidemiology and associated injuries in paediatric diaphyseal femur fractures treated at a limited resource zonal referral hospital in northern Tanzania.

Authors:  Albert P Macha; Rogers Temu; Frank Olotu; Neil P Seth; Honest L Massawe
Journal:  BMC Musculoskelet Disord       Date:  2022-04-18       Impact factor: 2.562

  3 in total

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