Literature DB >> 21926870

Pediatric Chance fractures: a multicenter perspective.

Alexandre Arkader1, William C Warner, Vernon T Tolo, Paul D Sponseller, David L Skaggs.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Chance fractures or flexion-distraction injuries of the spine are uncommon in children. Previous reports have been limited to isolated case reports or very small retrospective series. This is the largest series reported in the English literature.
METHODS: This was a multicenter retrospective review of pediatric Chance fractures treated at 3 large level-1 pediatric trauma centers. We analyzed the demographics, causes, circumstances, treatment, complications, and clinical outcome of 35 patients younger than 18 years old with a Chance fracture. We hypothesize that surgical treatment provides the best results.
RESULTS: There were 20 females and 15 males, with an average age of 9 years (range, 1.6 to 17 y). The most common level of injury was at L2 and L3 (20/35). Fifteen children (43%) had a neurological deficit at the time of injury and only 8 fully recovered. One patient deceased before formal orthopaedic treatment. Patients were treated at the discretion of the surgeon and the surgically treated group (20/34) had greater initial kyphotic deformity (22 degrees) than those treated nonoperatively (14/34; 11.4 degrees) and less posttreatment residual kyphotic deformity (3.5 vs. 20 degrees, respectively). The complication rate related to treatment was 26% (9/34) and most complications in the nonoperative group were related to progression of kyphosis whereas in the surgical group most complications are related to discomfort over the hardware (4 patients). Fifteen children (43%) had neurological deficit at presentation, 7 did not fully recover, for an incidence of permanent neurologic deficit of 10% among restrained patients versus 42% for unrestrained patients. Twenty-one patients (62%) had a good final clinical outcome defined by no chronic pain or neurologic deficit, this represented 45% good outcome in the nonoperative group compared with 84% in the operative group (NS).
CONCLUSIONS: In this multicenter retrospective study, surgical treatment of Chance fractures in children seems to produce better clinical outcome, the appropriate use of restraints reduce the incidence of definitive neurologic deficit. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level 3, comparative study.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21926870     DOI: 10.1097/BPO.0b013e31822f1b0b

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pediatr Orthop        ISSN: 0271-6798            Impact factor:   2.324


  6 in total

1.  Seat belt syndrome with unstable Chance fracture dislocation of the second lumbar vertebra without neurological deficits.

Authors:  David O Onu; Andrew W Hunn; Robert D Bohmer
Journal:  BMJ Case Rep       Date:  2014-01-08

2.  Operative treatment of chance injuries in the paediatric population.

Authors:  Sean Suttor; Randolph Gray; Corrine Bridge; Andrew Cree
Journal:  Eur Spine J       Date:  2012-12-01       Impact factor: 3.134

3.  [Thoracic and lumbar spinal injuries in children and adolescents].

Authors:  M Voth; C Nau; I Marzi
Journal:  Unfallchirurg       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 1.000

4.  Is Long-Segment Fixation a Rule in Fractures Associated With Ankylosing Spondylitis?

Authors:  Arvind G Kulkarni; Varun K Agarwal; Nandish Kumar Kc; Avinash Kumar; Ankit Patel
Journal:  Int J Spine Surg       Date:  2019-04-30

5.  Purely Ligamentous Flexion-Distraction Injury in a Five-Year-Old Child Treated with Surgical Management.

Authors:  Ryan M Schiedo; William Lavelle; Nathaniel R Ordway; Tarush Rustagi; Mike H Sun
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2017-04-03

6.  Asymmetrical pedicle subtraction osteotomy for progressive kyphoscoliosis caused by a pediatric Chance fracture: a case report.

Authors:  Satoshi Suzuki; Nobuyuki Fujita; Tomohiro Hikata; Akio Iwanami; Ken Ishii; Masaya Nakamura; Morio Matsumoto; Kota Watanabe
Journal:  Scoliosis Spinal Disord       Date:  2017-03-14
  6 in total

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