| Literature DB >> 27339476 |
Laura A Leaman1, William L Hennrikus2, James J Bresnahan3,4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Fractures are the second most common presentation of child abuse following soft-tissue bruising and burns. It is often difficult to determine potential abuse in a child presenting with a non-rib fracture(s) and without soft-tissue injuries.Entities:
Keywords: Child abuse; Fracture; NAT; Non-accidental; Trauma
Year: 2016 PMID: 27339476 PMCID: PMC4940250 DOI: 10.1007/s11832-016-0755-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Orthop ISSN: 1863-2521 Impact factor: 1.548
Fig. 1Overall distribution of fractures in relation to age. Thirty-two percent of those aged <1 year who presented with fractures were reported as NAT as opposed to only 5 % of those aged 1–2 years
Abuse classification as related to age and gender
| Abuse classification | <1 year (%) | 1–2 years (%) | Total (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | M | F | M | F | M | F |
| Not reported | 14 (70) | 20 (66) | 39 (100) | 23 (89) | 53 (90) | 43 (77) |
| Reported | 6 (30) | 10 (33) | 0 (0) | 3 (11) | 6 (10) | 13 (23) |
| Total | 20 (100) | 30 (100) | 39 (100) | 26 (100) | 59 (100) | 56 (100) |
Males and females were equally likely to be reported for NAT (p = 0.059)
Multiple fractures as related to abuse classification
| Abuse classification | <1 year (%) | 1–2 years (%) | Combined age groups | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fractures | Single | Multiple | Single | Multiple | Single | Multiple |
| Not reported | 24 (89) | 10 (43) | 41 (100) | 21 (88) | 65 (96) | 31 (66) |
| Reported | 3 (11) | 13 (57) | 0 (0) | 3 (12) | 3 (4) | 16 (44) |
| Total | 27 (100) | 23 (100) | 41 (100) | 24 (100) | 68 (100) | 47 (100) |
Forty-one percent of all patients had multiple fractures and 57 % of those aged <1 year with multiple fractures were reported as NAT
Distribution of long bone fractures among age groups
| Fracture location | Abuse | <1 year (%) | 1–2 years (%) | Total (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Humerus | Not reported | 3 (27) | 14 (88) | 17 (63) |
| Reported | 8 (73) | 2 (12) | 10 (37) | |
| Total | 11 (100) | 16 (100) | 27 (100) |
Six of 15 tibia shaft fractures were reported, and six tibial corner fractures were reported
Fig. 2Reported and not reported fractures by location and age. Humerus factures in children aged <1 year were the most common fractures reported as NAT. Children aged 1–2 years with long bone fractures were not commonly reported as NAT
Fig. 3Reported and not reported fractures by age and initial location of presentation. Forty percent of those aged <1 year who presented to the ED were reported as abuse
Distribution of reported NAT by location of presentation and fracture type
| Fracture | Total reported | ED reported | Clinic reported |
|---|---|---|---|
| Humerus | 27 (10) | 22 (10) | 5 (0) |
| Femur | 35 (17) | 33 (17) | 2 (0) |
| Tibia | 43 (13) | 28 (10) | 15 (2) |
Nearly every fracture reported was first evaluated in the ED. Three of 40 fractures reported as NAT first presented to an orthopedist