| Literature DB >> 32591847 |
Marie-Louise H J Loos1, Tayiba Ahmed2, Roel Bakx3, Rick R van Rijn2,4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The purpose of the study was to determine the rate of occult fractures (without clinical symptoms) per presenting clinical injury i.e., children presenting with a fracture, bruise, abusive head trauma and the types of fracture most likely to be found, in a series of infants and young children suspected of being victims of NAT.Entities:
Keywords: Fractures and dislocations; Non accidental injury; Paediatric injury; Skeletal survey; x-ray
Year: 2020 PMID: 32591847 PMCID: PMC7385004 DOI: 10.1007/s00383-020-04706-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Surg Int ISSN: 0179-0358 Impact factor: 1.827
Demographic information
| Age in monthsa | Boy | Follow-up | Second opinion | Occult fractures primary skeletal survey | Occult fractures follow-up skeletal survey |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0–6 (167) | 96 (58) | 57 (34) | 110 (66) | 73 (44) | 16 (10) |
| 7–12 (65) | 35 (54) | 15 (23) | 39 (60) | 9 (14) | |
| 13–18 (20) | 13 (65) | 1 (5) | 12 (60) | 2 (10) | 1 (5) |
| 19–24 (20) | 12 (60) | 1 (5) | 11 (55) | 5 (25) | |
| 25–36 (11) | 9 (82) | 6 (55) | 2 (18) | ||
| 37–48 (12) | 6 (50) | 10 (83) | 3 (25) | ||
| Total (296) | 172 (58) | 74 (25) | 189 (64) | 94 (32) | 17 (6) |
The count and proportion (%) per age category of children is provided in the table (per subgroup)
The bottom line provides data on all children (n = 296) and % of total amount of children
Blank cells signify 0 subjects in this group
aTotal number of subjects per category, the age of one child was unknown and is only included in the total amount
Positive skeletal survey per clinical injury
| Age in monthsa | Fracture | AHT | Bruise | NAT sibling/twin | Total no. positive skeletal survey/total skeletal survey (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0–6 | 27/63 (43) | 30/63 (48) | 20/25 (80) | 5/9 (56) | 89/167 (53) |
| 7–12 | 5/36 (14) | 3/21 (14) | 3/8 (38) | 0/2 (0) | 9/65 (14) |
| 13–18 | 1/8 (13) | 1/3 (33) | 0/5 (0) | 3/20 (15) | |
| 19–24 | 2/9 (22) | 1/6 (17) | 2/3 (67) | 5/20 (25) | |
| 25–36 | 1/6 (17) | 0/2 (0) | 0/1 (0) | 2/11 (18) | |
| 37–48 | 1/3 (33) | 1/6 (17) | 0/1 (0) | 3/12 (25) | |
| Total | 37/126 (29) | 33/90 (37) | 26/50 (52) | 7/21 (33) | 111/296 (38) |
Per age category and initial clinical injury for obtaining the skeletal survey is the count of positive skeletal survey versus the total skeletal surveys in this category provided and corresponding %. The column right provides data of all skeletal surveys per age category, positive skeletal survey count / total skeletal survey count and corresponding %
Blank cells signify 0 subjects in this group
NAT non-accidental trauma, AHT abusive head trauma
aTotal number of subjects per category, the age of one child was unknown and is only included in the total amount
Number of subjects (%)
| Age in monthsa | Fracture (total) | Upper extremity fracture | Lower extremity fracture | Skull fracture |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0–6 | 27/63 (43) | 7/9 (78) | 11/24 (46) | 2/14 (14) |
| 7–12 | 5/36 (14) | 1/7 (14) | 2/14 (14) | 2/13 (15) |
| 13–18 | 1/8 (13) | 0/1 (0) | 1/6 (17) | 0/1 (0) |
| 19–24 | 2/9 (22) | 2/5 (40) | 0/3 (0) | 0/1 (0) |
| 25–36 | 1/6 (17) | 0/2 (0) | 1/4 (25) | |
| 37–48 | 1/3 (33) | 0/1 (0) | 0/1 (0) | 0/1 (0) |
| Total | 37/126 (29) | 10/25 (40) | 16/53 (37) | 4/30 (13) |
Per age category and type of fracture (index fracture) as initial clinical injury for obtaining the skeletal survey is the count of positive skeletal survey versus the total skeletal surveys in this category provided and corresponding %. The left column provides data of all skeletal surveys per age category with a fracture as initial clinical injury (index fracture), positive skeletal survey count/total skeletal survey count and corresponding %
Blank cells signify 0 subjects in this group
aTotal number of subjects per category, the age of one child was unknown and is only included in the total amount
Fig. 1Prevalence and distribution of fractures (index fractures excluded). Total number of fracture location in children detected on the positive skeletal survey (primary and follow-up merged) and proportion (%) of the located fracture in all positive skeletal surveys (n = 111); e.g., in 56 children a rib fracture was detected, which is 50% of all children with a positive skeletal survey
Type of fracture on the skeletal survey
| Age in months | MCF | Acute and healing | Bilateral fractures |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0–6 | 80 (48) | 60 (36) | 28 (17) |
| 7–12 | 3 (5) | 6 (9) | 4 (6) |
| 13–18 | |||
| 19–24 | 2 (10) | 1 (5) | 1 (5) |
| 25–36 | 1 (9) | 1 (9) | |
| 37–48 | 1 (8) | 1 (8) | 1 (8) |
| Total | 86 (29%) | 68 (23%) | 35 (12%) |
Amount of children stratified per age category and % of total amount of children of the subgroup
Blank cells signify 0 subjects in this group
MCF indicates metaphyseal corner fracture
Fig. 2Prevalence and distribution of detected rib fractures on skeletal surveys (total rib fractures n = 216)