Peds Miller Notes
Scoliosis
- AIS
o Surgical treatment
▪ thoracic curves > 50, lumbar > 30
o = inc of smaller curves among male/female, but female ratio on curves > 30 deg 10:1
o rib heads of thor curve should have apical lordosis – if not, then MRI (syringomyelia)
o Brace
▪ Milwaukee or Boston with support for apex T7 and above
▪ Boston underarm for apex T8 and below
▪ Charleston for TL 25-35 curves
o PSF gold standard for thoracic curves
▪ revision as high as 19%
o ASF w/ instrumentation for thoracolumbar curves
o ASF/PSF for skeletal immaturity, < 10 yo, severe curves > 75 deg
▪ ant disc when pt Risser grade 0, large/stiff curves (< 50% flex index)
o SMA syndrome – from hypercorrection of curves in thin people
▪ Tx NGT with IVF, prolonged
o Delayed infx – from P. Acnes or Staph epi (one year later)
▪ Tx hdwr removal with 3 wks IV antibx
o Peak velocity 10 cm per year, occurs just before menses in females
o MRI for atypical curves, absence thor lordosis, atypical pain, neuro abn, foot deform, ext rapid curve prog
o Thoracoscopic release/fusion in prone is effective, better tolerated than when pt is lateral
o SSEPs
▪ 50% dec in amplitude, inc in latency of 10% concerning
o SRS-22 scores not improved w/ Cobb angle correction
- Infantile 2 mo – 3 yr
o Left thoracic
o Male predominance
o 22% had neural axis abn, 80% of these pt req surg
o if rib overlaps vert body at apex of curve, high risk prog (phase 2 rib)
▪ if overlap (phase 1), then must meas RVAD
o Rib-vertebral angle difference
▪ Measure of rotation
▪ Difference b/w RVA on each side
▪ > 20 deg w/ phase 1 rib, high risk progression
o < 25 deg curve, RVAD < 20 deg, observe
o 25-35, RVAD > 20 cast/brace
o > 35, MRI, surgery
- Skeletal immaturity
o Risser 0
o peak height velocity (right afterwards)
o menarche (b/w 0-1 is menarche)
o Risser 1 = 25% ossification
o Risser 2 = 50% ossification of iliac crest
o Risser 3 = 75% ossification
o Risser 4 = 100%
- Juvenile 3-10 yr
o High incidence of cord abnormalities
▪ Syringomyelia
▪ Arnold-Chiari malformation
o Right thoracic MC
o 95% have prog curves
o Thoracic curves prog more commonly
o All curves > 20 deg should be evaluated w/ MRI (20% neural axis abn)
o Asf/psf
- Congenital Scoliosis
o Failure of segm MC
o Associated anomalies
▪ Gu 25%, cardiac 10%, spinal dysraphism 30%
o Worst prognosis: unilateral bar w/ contralateral hemivertebrae
o Usual treatment
▪ ASF/PSF or PSF in situ
▪ Hemivertebral resection
• Can do in < 5 yo
• Correct curves < 40 deg
▪ No role for bracing
o Obliquity at LS junction caused by hemivert
▪ tx w/ hemivertebrectemy early before compensatory curve is fixed
o Rib fusions – adverse thor growth
▪ known as thor insuff sx
▪ Expansion thoracoplasty indicated – prosth rib distractor
o Surgery for any progression
- Congenital kyphosis
o highest risk for neurologic compromise
o Failure of formation MC
o May progress to paraplegia
o Type I – def of vert body, but post elements ok
▪ surg tx immediate
o Type II – vert bodies fused
▪ less progressive, less deform
▪ lower risk of paraplegia
o Surg
▪ if pt < 3-5 yo, before kyphosis > 50 deg, PSF ok
• hypertext cast for 6 mo
▪ if kyphosis > 50 deg, ant release w/ strut graft w/ PSF
NF
- Congenital type curve pattern
- Vertebral scalloping, enlarged foramina, short segmented, sharp curves, kyphoscoliosis, penciling of ribs
o > 3 ribs penciled = significant risk of progression of curve
- Must be ASF/PSF
- MRI preop
- NF1 has
o Plexiform neurofibromas
o Dural ectasia
Spondylolysis
- MC L5
- Initial: limit activity/brace
- Chronic: repair vs. fusion
Spondylolisthesis
- Dysplastic – elongation of pars, facet joints stretched, presents with more back pain (compression of nerve roots)
o more prone to deformity and neuro def
- Isthmic – defect, less back pain, facet jt intact
- Surgery for grade III, progression of deformity, fail conservative management
o Psf
o Grade I-II in situ
o III and above may need reduction w/ instrumentation
- High slip angle – means more junctional kyphosis
- Pelvic incidence
o obliquity of sacrum to pelvis meas on lateral XX
o fixed angle larger in pt w/ higher-grade deform when compared w/ low-grade slips
- risk of progression greatest during adoles growth spurt, esp w/ dysplastic spondylolysis
- Rf for prog: vert, dome-shaped sacrum, trapezoidal L5, kyphotic slip angle
- high-risk sports 5x more likely to have unfavorable outcome
- if pars interarticularis is chronic, then brace used until Asx
- direct repair reserved for pt w/ defects at L4 or L3
o L5 tx w/ L5-S1 fusion
Scheuermann’s kyphosis
- > 5 deg wedging, 3 consecutive vert
- differentiate from post kyphosis w/ hyperextension lat XX – apical region in Sch is inflex
- disc narrowing
- end plate irregularity
- Schmorl’s nodes
- Tx
o 65-80 deg – CTLSO
o Ant release/PSF for curve > 80 deg
Klippel Feil
- Low hairline
- Web neck
- Limited cervical ROM
- Conservative Tx
AAI
- Flex-ex views
o Up to 2.5 mm in adults is nl
o Up to 7.5 mm in children is nl
- ADI 4-5 mm is nl
- Rotatory subluxation
o Grisel’s dz: retropharyngeal irritation
▪ if deformity fixed, less pain, but torticollis remains
o CT scan to document – Tx w/ brace, then traction
o if sx > 3 mo, then post arthrodesis
Pseudosubluxation
- C2/C3 in < 8 yo
- Spinal laminar line drawn – Schwischuk’s line
o If intact, then is pseudosubluxation
Spine
- post arches fuse by 3-4 yo
- neurocentral synchondrosis b/w lat masses and body fuse @ 7 yo
- upper C-spine injuries MC b/w birth and 8 yo
o b/c horizontal facets, large head size, M. weakness, inc neck motion
- Swischuk’s line drawn along post arch of C1-3, should pass w/in 1.5 mm of post arch of C2
- MRI can clear C-spine in intubated, obtunded, uncooperative children
- for dx atlanto-occipital dislocation
o Wackenheim line drawn along clivus and should intersect tangentially the tip of odontoid
o Powers ratio = line from basion to post arch of atlas / line from opisthion to ant arch (> 1.0, or < 0.55 is disruption
o no halo or traction
- odontoid fx
o only 50% apposition necessary
- rupture of transverse lig is rare (10% of ped C-spine inj)
o avulsion of transv lig to C1 MC
- Halo use: 68% complication rates
- SCIWORA cause of paralysis in 20-30% children w/ inj of SC
o 50% have late neuro deterioration
o cause by vasc insult watershed area
o < 10 yo more likely to have perm paralysis (difference in inj type)
o tx: immobilization 2-3 mo in C-collar
- disc is stronger than cancellous bone – vert body is 1st structure to fail
- TL fx
o kyphosis < 20 deg tx w/ hyperextension casting
- Slipped vert apophysis
o fx of vert endplate
o MC involves caudal endplate of L4
o teenagers
Myelodysplasia
- Risk factors
o Maternal hyperthermia, maternal IDDM, valproic acid, folate def
▪ 85% caused by folate def
- C-section when dx is known
- Level = lowest functioning root
- Surgical infx rate 5-25%
- Hip dislocations
o Most common L3-L4 levels (unopposed hip flexion, adduction)
o Hip flexion contractures (strong flexors, weak extensors)
- Knee flexion contractures
o Correction of 20 deg or more is indicated
- Ober-Yount procedure
o IT band lengthening prox/dist to tx hip abd contracture
- Clubfoot
o Rigid, poor response to casting
▪ 30% have at birth
o Req surgery
- vertical talus, calcaneus feet (no GCS complex)
o thigh-foot angle greater than 20 deg needs supramalleolar osteotomy
o valgus foot deformity
▪ seen at L45 level deformity
- scoliosis
o congenital
o 100% incidence in thoracic levels
o most progression before age 15
o average curve prog 5 deg/year for curves > 40 deg
o need curve < 40, pelvic obliquity < 25 to sit properly
o bracing ineffective
o surg: ASF/PSF
o high pseudarthrosis rate
o infx 15-25% (thin skin, then dura underneath)
- congenital kyphosis
o classic in spina bifida
o 10-15% of pt
o causes recurrent skin breakdown
o tx: Kyphectemy
Arthrogryposis
- multiple congenitally rigid joints
- sensation intact
- nl intelligence
- risk factor: oligohydramnios
- limitation of ROM, decreased M. mass
- clubfoot: surgery
o initial: soft tissue release
o later: talectemy, or triple arthrodesis
- teratologic hip dislocation (hip was never in joint)
o pseudoacetabulum at presentation
o Pavlik contraindicated (AVN)
o Tx open reduction vs. nothing
▪ Open red via medial approach
Larsen’s Syndrome
- Multiple joint dislocations
- Flattened facies
- Scoliosis
- Cervical kyphosis
Sacral agenesis
- Dimpling over buttocks
- Imperforate anus
- Kyphosis – lumbar
- Knees extended
- Hips flexed
Duchenne’s
- Sex-linked recessive
- Point deletion of dystrophin gene
o Located Xp21 on X chromosome
o Frame shift of all mRNA distal to deletion
o Codes nonsense protein
- Elevated CPK
- Scoliosis
o PSF for curves > 20-25 deg
- Steroids improve M. strength, slow progressive weakening
- Post tib tendon transfer for equinovarus
Becker’s
- X-linked transmission
- cardiomyopathy
Fascioscapulohumeral MD
- Autosomal dominant
- nl CPK
- scapular winging
Spinal Muscular Atrophy
- progressive symmetric M. weakness caused by loss of ant horn cells
- AR
- Mutation in survival motor neuron gene on chrom 5q
- Type II – infantile
o M. weakness more advanced in legs than arms
o Hip dislocation occur in 62%
▪ Usu painless
- Type III – Kugelberg-Welander
o Onset of M. weakness b/w 2-15 yrs
Friedrich’s ataxia
- AR
- GAA trinucleotide repeat in both copies of frataxin gene on chrom 9
o Frataxin is mitochondrial protein – involved in iron metabolism
o Tx w/ Coenzyme Q
- Spinocerebellar deg dz
- Onset < 10 yo
- Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, DM
- Death at 25 yrs (cardiac)
- Cavus feet
- Scoliosis
o Distinguishes it from CMT
CMT
- AD, AR, and X-linked
- Demyelinating forms that slow nerve cond velocity
o CMT I, III, IV
- Axonal forms that dec compound muscle act pot
o CMT II
- Disease of peripheral nervous system
- Peripheral myelin protein 22 abnormal
o On chrom 17
- Connexin 32 abn in X-linked
- Dejerine-Sottas syndrome = HSMN III
o Occurs in infants
o Triple arthrodesis contraindicated b/c feet may lose prot sensation
- most affected muscles (weakness)
o Anterior tibialis
o Peroneus brevis
o Intrinsics foot
o Intrinsics hand – wasting
- Hip dysplasia
o Pt more prone to sciatic nerve palsy after pelvic surg
- Scoliosis
o Left thoracic, kyphotic curves
- Cavovarus foot
o Mild, flexible
▪ Plantar fascia release, 1st MT dorsal closing wedge
o Rigid
▪ Calcaneal osteotomy
o Severe
▪ Triple arthrodesis
CP
- Non-progressive, UMN dz
- Spastic, dystonic, ataxic, hypotonic
- Onset < 2 yo
- Botox (botulinum-A toxin)
o Competitive inhibitor at motor endplate – irreversible binder
o Presynaptic cholinergic receptor
o Lasts 3-6 mo
- AFO’s
o Solid for spastic diplegia
o Crouch gait – floor reaction AFO’s
▪ b/c of ankle plantar weakness
- Baclofen
o GABA agonist
o Side effect is decreasing M. tone
- Toe walking
o Ankle DF > 5-10 deg, then AFO
o > 10 deg, then TAL
- Crouch gait
o Multiple release (not just heel cord – would worsen gait)
- Stiff Knee gait
o Limited knee flexion in swing phase
▪ b/c of rectus spasticity
o EMG w/ rectus firing out of phase
o Consider rectus femoris transfer w/ medial hamstring lengthening
▪ Risks of lateral hamstring lengthening incl weakness leading to knee hypertext during stance phase
- Dorsal rhizotomy
o For pt 4-8 yo
o Spastic diplegia, walking gait abnormality
o DR and PT better than PT alone
o Some pt may need more ortho procedures
- Scoliosis
o Spastic quad at highest risk
o C-shaped curve
o Resistant to bracing
o Surg indications: progressive deformity, sitting imbalance, pelvic obliquity
o Controversial b/w ASF/PSF vs. PSF
o Need segmental fixation
o Must fuse to pelvis
- Hip subluxation
o Early tx: adductor/flexor release (< 4 yo)
o Later tx: VDRO, pelvic osteotomies
o Late complications – adduction contracture, scissoring gait, dislocation
o For a chronic painful dislocation
▪ Abduction osteotomy (tip head away from pelvis)
▪ Proximal femoral resection
• But can get superior migration
- Equinovalgus foot
o Cause: spastic peroneals, heel cord contracture (Achilles), ligamentous laxity
o Hindfoot valgus (from loose ligaments)
o Tx
▪ TAL/calcaneal osteotomy
▪ Grice procedure (lateral column lengthening), w/ TAL
- Equinovarus foot
o Cause: over pull of tibialis anterior or post tibialis, tight Achilles
o Tx: TAL + post tib split transfer, or Rancho (split tib ant and TAL)
o SPLATT
▪ If post tib tendon out-of-phase then complete transfer
▪ If PTT continuous activity, then split transfer
o Try to delay surgeries until at least 6 yo
o Surgery before age 8 – 75% of them fail
- Foot
o Hallux valgus deformities – MTP fusion
- Hand
o Aggressive tx to stretch agonistic muscle, and strengthen antagonists
o FA hyperpronation limits hand fx
▪ Tx w/ rerouting of pronator teres through interosseous membrane
o Wrist/finger flexion deformity
▪ Tx w/ t-x FCU to wrist extensors
o More severely affected pt – muscle lengthenings
o More functional pt – dynamic tendon transfers
o Thumb-in-palm contracture
▪ Tx w/ Z-plasty syndactyly release
▪ Care not to overrelease adductor
Fibular Hemimelia
- Equinovalgus foot deformities (no ankle support)
- Usu distal deficiency
- LLD
- Tx:
o Good foot (at least 4 rays), then
▪ limb lengthening (5-8 cm) or
▪ epiphysiodesis (2-5 cm)
o Bad foot (3 rays or less)
▪ Amputation
• 9-12 months of age
Tibia Hemimelia
- Equinovarus foot
- AD
- Tx, depends on magnitude of deficiency (BKA vs. AKA)
o If quad fx, then save distal part
o If no quad, then knee disarticulation
Congential Pseudarthrosis of Tibia
- Associated with NF (50%)
- Anterolateral bowing
- Tx: bracing (w/ no fracture)
o w/ fracture, then IM nail with bone graft
o vasc fibula (but only heals at one end)
- NEVER osteotomy!!
Posteromedial bowing
- Associated calcaneovalgus foot
- Tx: nothing (it spontaneously corrects), stretching
- 2-5 cm LLD at maturity
Blount’s
- Infantile
o Prox med tib physis
o Onset < 3 yo
o Genu varum
o Metaphyseal diaphyseal angle > 13 deg
▪ If > 20 deg, then worse outcome
o Ass w/ medial tibial physis growth arrest
o Tx: Brace w/ KAFO
o Surgery for pt with bar, bracing failures
▪ Best results early < 5 yo
▪ Need to over-correct into valgus
- Adolescent’s
o Overweight, African-american
o Tx: lateral hemiepiphysiodesis, prox tib osteotomy
Clubfoot
- Hindfoot – equinovarus
- Forefoot – supination, adductus
- Midfoot – cavus
o Plantar flexion of foreft on hindft
- Talus smaller than nl
- Talar neck deviated in plant med direction
- Can be identified on u/s @ 12 wks gest
- Tx: LLC, serial casting w/ 50% success rate
o Surg tx @ 9-10 months
o Ponseti method
▪ Rotation of foot around fixed talus
▪ Calcaneus rotated laterally/superiorly (not translated)
▪ Order
• 1. correct cavus
o DF 1st MT against talus
• 2. correct adductus/varus
• 3. correct equines
▪ final LLC for 3 wks
▪ 40% req lat t-x of tib ant b/w ages 2-5
▪ TAL @ 6-8 wks
▪ Bracing
• Night-time until 2-4 yo
▪ 80-90% success rate
- XX: hindfoot parallelism
Vertical talus
- Congenital convex pes valgus
- Dorsolateral dislocation of TN jt
- DF contracture of foreft on hindft
- Rocker bottom foot
- Talipes equinovalgus
- Ass w/ spina bifida, arthrogryposis, sacral agenesis
- Diff dx: calcaneovalgus deformity
o Spont resolves
o Differentiated by flexible midft but DF contracture of ankle
- XX: lateral plantar flexion view: talus not in line w/ metatarsals
o Navicular is dorsally dislocated
- Tx: surg release post med @ 6-9 mo of age, pin talonavicular jt,
o Also, dorsal approach to TN jt, Achilles lengthening – better correct
o Naviculectemy – older child
o NEVER casting
Calcaneovalgus foot
- Positional deformity
- No dislocation of talonavicular joint
- Corrects w/ stretching exercises
- Ass w/ posteromedial bowing
Metatarsus adductus
- Ass w/ DDH
- Trapezoid shape of med cuneiform, med orientation of 1st MT-medial cun jt
- Correct w/ stretching when supple beyond midline
o When deformity is supple, no tx required
- Casting, brace for bad deformities
o Casting < 1yo
o Lateral press at calc-cub jt
- Surg for residual deformity (osteotomy)
o Opening wedge of med cuneiform
Tarsal Coalition
- AD, full penetrance
- TC & CN coalitions =
- Valgus hindft, dec subtalar motion
o More severe in TC coalition
- 8-12 yrs symptomatic CN
- 12-16 yrs sx TC, when coalition ossifies
- interposition of EDB
- > 50%, valgus of hindft, narrowing of post facet, then excision is bad
Adolescent bunion
- Wait until epiphyses closed
- 50% recurrent rate
- RF for recurrence: pes planus, tight Achilles, long great toe
- Metatarsal osteotomy
Cavus foot
- May be neurogenic – check for hairy patches, XX
- Coleman block test, assesses flexibility
o If hindfoot fixed, then must include this w/ surg tx
- Tx: plantar release, metatarsal osteotomy, tendon transfer, calc osteotomy (when hindft fixed)
o Dorsiflexion osteotomy of 1st MT when hindft flexible
- Avoid triple arth
Kohler’s Dz
- AVN of tarsal navicular
o From repetitive trauma to midft w/ weight-bearing
- MC in boys, bilateral in 20%
- Tx: casting SLWC, 1 mo
- XX delayed by 8 mo
- Often resolves spontaneously
Freiberg’s Infarction
- adolescent female athletes
- longest MT (2nd) typically affected
Peroneal spastic flatfoot
- Calcaneonavicular coalition – most common cause
o Bar seen on oblique view
o CT scan to r/o second coalition
o Resect < 14 yo
- Can be caused by trauma, JRA
Osteomyelitis
- Metaphyseal, hematogenous
- MC org: Staph aureus
- Elevated WBC, ESR, CRP
o CRP better than ESR in monitoring response
o More rapid decline in response to tx
- XX: nl early
- Aspirate w/ large-bore needle
- Tx: IV, then oral antibx (if no pus)
o Surgery if pus
Septic arthritis
- Hematogenous
- Hip, shoulder, elbow, ankle (jt w/ intra-art metaphyseal)
- SI jt
o Bedrest
o Bld cx
o IV antibx
- Aspirate!
- Gonorrhea MC for adolescents
Discitis
- Need MRI
- Tx: IV antibx for staph, limit activity (no biopsy)
Perthes Dz
- AVN prox femoral epiphysis
- Protein S/Protein C implicated as potential etiology
o 75% children have abn clotting factors
- tend to be shorter, delay in bone maturation 2 yr, high rate of ADHD, exposed to 2° smoke
- Boys affected 4:1
o outcomes are =
- 4-8 yo age range MC
- bilateral 12% (never symmetric)
- poor prognosis > 6 yo, total head involvement
- 50% of pt w/ Perthes will dev degen OA of hip
- diff dx: Meyer’s dysplasia, SED, MED, sickle cell, Gaucher’s, hypothyroidism
- Hinge abduction poor prog sign
- MRI can correlate w/ bone scan for early Perthes
o % physeal involvement may correlate better w/ long-term prog than fem head involv
- Tx is supportive
o Goal is to maintain motion
o Femoral/pelvic osteotomy reserved for late sx
SCFE
- Obese, rapid growth, males
- increased shear stress across growth plate weakened by rapid growth (puberty) or endocrine
- atypical
o < 10 yo, > 16 yo, weight < 50th perc
- male:female 3:2
- Neck displaced anteriorly, externally rotated
- On XX: Klein’s line, widened physis
- Fracture through hypertrophic zone
o Increased height of zone of hypertrophy
- Stable hip (can bear weight)
o Incidence of AVN is 3-5%
- Unstable hip (cannot bear weight)
o Incidence of AVN is 50%, regardless of tx
- Tx: Pin in situ, or where reduced by positioning, bilateral if endocrine etiology
o If can insert 4 threads into epiphysis, then don’t need 2 pins
- PWB for 6 wks
- 60% of opposite hip slips are Asx
o should prophy pin most
- Endocrine w/u < 10 yo
Sprengel’s deformity
- Cong failure of descent of scapula opposite 5th cervical vert to final nl position
- MC in girls
- Bilateral in 10-30% pt
- Cavendish classification
o Grade I mild – level GH jt
o Grade II visible lump in neck
o Grade III 2-5 cm of shoulder elevation
o Grade IV shoulder near occiput
- Associated with Klippel-Feil, cong scoliosis
- High small scapula
- Tx: observation vs. Woodward procedure (midline incision, reflect off rhomboids, pulling scapula down – just for cosmetic reasons)
o Surg @ at least 3 yr of age
o Brachial plexus injury greatest in child > 8 yo
Congenital Pseudarthrosis of clavicle
- 100% is Right side (failure fusion of medial/lateral anlage), unilateral
- Tx: grafting/internal fixation vs. observation
Birth Brachial Plexus Palsy
- MC involves C5 and C6
- Adduction internal rotation deformity
- Retroversion of glenoid, post sublux/medial flattening of hum head, prominent acromion
- Exploration if biceps has not returned by 6 mo age
- If lose passive ER in adduction, then likely GH dysplasia
- 1 in 11 newborns w/ clavicle fx had BP palsy
- Prox hum does not ossify until 6 mo age
- Lat dorsi/teres major transfer
o @ age 4 yrs
Congenital dislocation of radial head
- Post dislocation w/ bowing/shortening of radius
- Radial head is mushroom shaped
- Tx: excision of radial head at maturity – helps motion
Radioulnar Synostosis
- Arm is fixed in varying degrees of pronation
- Tx is based on functional deficit
o One arm in pronation, other in supination
Madelung’s deformity
- Blount’s of radius
- Associated w/ Leri-Weill syndrome (dyschondrosteosis)
o AD
o Deletions in SHOX gene
- Radial/volar hand displacement due to partial def of growth of distal radial physis
- Most do not require osteotomy
- Can be compared to infection, tumor on XX
Congenital amputations
- UE prosthesis @ 6 months
Radial clubhand
- Longitudinal deficiency, variable lengths
- Associated w/ TAR, VATER
- Tx dependent on elbow function (biceps)
o If have biceps, surgical centralization is option
o If not, leave where it is
Duplicate thumb
- Tx: Take out the ulnar-most thumb typically (ligamentous stability)
- Leave the most stable and dominant
Congenital dislocation of hip
- RF: first-born, female, breech, pos fam hx
- Associated w/ torticollis, metatarsus adductus
- Ortolani sign – dislocation (can put it back in)
- Barlow’s sign – dislocatable (in adduction)
o See these signs early < 6 mo
- Adduction contracture, asymmetrical limb signs
o + Galeazzi sign
- Tx: if reducible
o 0-6 mo: Pavlik harness – tx in abduction & flexion
o 6 mo – 2 yrs, or irreducible – arthrogram, closed reduction
▪ spica cast for 3 mo
o > 2 yrs – open reduction, +/- femoral osteotomy w/ shortening
▪ femoral osteotomy sufficient up to age 4 yrs
▪ pelvic osteotomy usu necessary later
• Pemberton – volume depleting
• Shelf – salvage
• Salter – rotational
o Bilateral > 6 yo
▪ Tx: leave alone
o Unilateral > 8 yo
▪ Tx: leave alone
Developmental dysplasia of hip
- Failure of acetabular development
- Jt well-developed by 11th fetal week
- RF: female gender, family hx, breech
o 20% of pt in breech w/ DDH
- Ass w/ oligohydramnios, cong recurvatum of knee, torticollis
- Index > 30-35 deg is significant (> 30 deg by age of 2 yo)
o Tx: abduction splinting (early)
- Pt walk w/ glut medius insuff b/c of high position of GT
- Alpha angle > 60 deg, beta angle < 35 deg
o u/s can be used at week 3 or 4
- Femoral head ossification by age 6 mo
- Ischemic necrosis
o dx based on XX – failure of growth of ossific nucleus 1 yr p reduction
o or broadening of fem neck 1 yr p
o or inc density, then frag of ossified fem head
- Pavlik harness
o If hip hyperflexed, then fem nerve palsy, inf hip dislocation
o If hip posterior sublux – lead to posterior wall def (Pavlik dz)
- Tx: surgical
o Closed red
▪ Preferred to age 2
▪ Good w/ adductor tenotomy
o Open red
▪ Older than age 2
▪ Medial approach
• inverted labrum cannot be seen
• medial fem circumflex is in deep field of dissection
▪ anterior approach
• all impediments can be addressed
o Femoral osteotomy
o Pelvic osteotomy
▪ Salter
• 25deg lateral coverage
• 10deg ant coverage
▪ Pemberton, Dega
• reshaping osteotomies
• req open triradiate
▪ Triple innominate
▪ PAO – extension, adduction, anteversion
▪ Shelf, Chiari (requires metaplasia – does not use native cartilage like upper ones)
Congenital coxa vara
- Decreased neck-shaft angle
- Vertical position of physeal plate
- Triangular fragment in inferior femoral neck
- Inverted-Y lucency along femoral epiphysis
- nl Hilgenreiner’s angle 25 deg
o > 60 deg, progression of deformity, no healing
- hip abductors weak – high-riding GT
- Tx: surgical
o Hilg physeal angle > 60 deg, or
o progression or
o Trend gait or
o If neck-shaft angle 90 deg or less, or progression – then valgus osteotomy
o goals: neck-shaft angle to 160 deg, Hilg angle 25 deg, norm fem rotation
- premature closure of prox fem physis occurs by 24 mo
PFFD
- Can present as severe shortening, absent hip, or cervical pseudarthrosis
- 50% have fibular hemimelia
- Tx depends on magnitude of deficiency
o If bilateral, then limbs should be left alone
o If pseudarthrosis cervical, then
▪ Repair operatively
Congenital short femur
- 15-20% short femur
- externally rotated femur, bulky thigh
- absent ACL, bowing of femur
- Tx: can be lengthened if 30% or less shortening
LLD
- Distal femur 9 mm, prox tibia 6 mm per year – can use as rule of thumb
- Tx
o Shoe lift for inch or less
o Epiphysiodesis for discrepancy of 2.5- 4.0 cm
o Lengthening 4 cm or greater
o Prosthesis w/ or w/o conversion for 30% or more shortening
- Does not cause back pain
Amputations
- Diaphyseal level tend to overgrow by appositional growth
- UE prosthesis @ 6 mo, LE prosthesis @ 1 yr
Congenital dislocation of knee
- Ass w/ dislocation of hip
- Tx knee dislocation first if both present
o Progressive casting/stretching in flexion
o Once 90 deg of flexion, then tx hip dislocation
Congenital patellar dislocation
- Comprehensive Lateral release, and realignment, need a checkrein (semitendinosus wrapped around to keep patella medial)
Traumatic patellar dislocation
- Closed tx successful in about 75%
- For recurrent, proximal realignment, (lat release, med augmentation)
o No bony proc – will shut down physis
OCD
- If growth plate open, 50-75% will heal w/o fragmentation
- Young children w/ activity modification
- Surgery for a loose body, impending fragmentation
Osgood-Schlatter’s
- Microfx of immature apophysis due to overuse
- Tx: rest, act modification
Discoid meniscus
- Mechanical sx, lack full extension
- Usu lateral meniscus
- Tx: partial vs. complete excision
- 75% end up having total meniscectemy eventually
popliteal cyst
- Tx: observation
FGFR
- 4 identified
- FGFR 3
o Chromosome 4
o Affects skull, long bone development
o Achondroplasia, hypochondroplasia, thanatophoric dysplasia (lethal)
Neurofibromin
- NF 1 gene
- Chromosome 17
- NF
Fibrillin
- Chromosome 15
- Marfan’s sx
Dwarfism
- Acromelic – hand shortening
- Mesomelic – trunk shortening
- Rhizomelic – root or proximal shortening
Achondroplasia
- AD, rhizomelic
o shortening prox limb
- FGFR 3
- single nucleotide substitution
o converts either G to A
▪ or G to C
▪ position 380 in domain of protein
▪ results in Glycine to arginine subst
- Frontal bossing, bowed legs
- Genu varum 90%
o also internal tibial torsion
- Spinal malalignment (70%)
o Kyphosis (typically TL junction)
▪ MC in infants
▪ resolves when child walks
• later than others with dwarfism
o Spinal stenosis (pedicles short)
▪ cerv stenosis is life-threatening
▪ cerv instability is rare
- humerus, femur most affected
o greatest endochondral growth
- function and self-image as good as average adults
- Hypochondroplasia
o Not apparent before age 2
o Spinal stenosis, genu varum, short
o Management same as achondro
- Thanatophoric dysplasia
o Severe, usually lethal
o FGFR-3
o Severe restrictive lung dz
Psuedoachondroplasia
- AD
- Mutation in COMP gene
o Extracellular calcium-binding glycoprotein in thrombospondin family
o Involved in chondrocyte migration/prolif
o Mutations in type III repeat region result in decreased calcium binding
o 30% w/ in-frame deletion mutation
- Along w/ MED, part of same dz spectrum
- Need early THA
Diastrophic Dwarfism (twisted dwarf)
- AR
- Mutation in sulfate transporter gene
o Affects cartilage b/c of negatively charged sulfate groups in PG molecules
- Short stature
- Tracheomalacia
- Cervical kyphosis – resolves spont
o Kyphoscoliosis in TL spine may need OR
- Hitchhiker thumb (short metacarpals)
- Cauliflower ears
- Scoliosis
- Bad clubfeet
- Flexion contractures of knees
Spondyloepiphyseal Dysplasia
- AD
- Congenital form MC
- Short stature, short trunk, short limbs
- Type II collagen
o Mutation in COL2A1
o Affects cartilage and vitreous humor
- Platyspondyly (flat), shortening of vert height, odontoid hypoplasia
o Kyphoscoliosis managed w/ brace
- Coxa vara, genu valgum, planovalgus foot
- Retinal detachment, myopia, hearing loss
- Epiphyseal irregularities
- Less common X-linked form
o Mutation in SEDL gene
▪ Involved in vesicle transport from ER to Golgi
o Milder dz
Kneist’s Dysplasia
- AD
- Mutation in COL2A1
- Short trunk
- Flat face
- Myopia, retinal detachment, deafness
Metaphyseal Chondrodysplasia
- Schmid type
o MC
o AD
o Type X collagen
▪ Mutation in COL110A1
o Short stature, waddling gait, genu varum
o Looks like rickets
- Jansen type
o AD
o Short
o Hypercalcemia, hyperphosphaturia
- McKusick type
o AR
o Mutation RMRP, nuclear gene
o Impaired cellular immunity, anemia, Hirschsprung’s dz
Multiple epiphyseal dyplasia
- AD
- Short stature
- Type II collagen and Type IX
o Mutation in COL9A2 for type IX collagen
▪ Milder than those w/ COMP- no hip involvement
- COMP inhibitor – associated with
- Epiphyseal irregularities (NO SPINE)
o Genu valgum
▪ Tx w/ hemiepiphysiodesis
- Hip problems managed similar to Perthes
Ellis-van Creveld Syndrome
- AR
- Polydactyly, short stature, mesoacromelic shortening, sparse hair, dysplatic nails/teeth
- Congenital heart dz in 60%
- Genu valgum
- Linked to gene EVC
o Expressed in higher levels in distal limb, vert bodies
Dyschondrosteosis
- AD
- Short stature, mesomelic shortening, Madelung’s
- Mutation in SHOX
o Located at tip of both sex chromosomes
o Encodes homeobox-containing DNA transcription factor
o Also ass w/ growth failure in Turner’s
Spondylometaphyseal dysplasia
- AD
- Short stature
- Platyspondyly
- Scoliosis
- Coxa vara
Diaphyseal dysplasia
- Lack of metaphyseal remodeling
Osteopetrosis
- Dense bones, brittle
- Obliteration of medullary canal (looks like chalk)
- Rugger jersey spine
- Anemia
- Nl life expectancy
- Macrocephaly
- Deafness
- Blindness
- HSM
- Tx: BM transplant
o Malignant form: 1,25 dihydroxy vitamin D
o Tx fractures via casting
Neurofibromatosis
- Neurofibromin
o Ras signaling pathway
- Chrom 17
- Café au lait spots
- Hemihypertrophy
- Scoliosis (ASF/PSF)
o nondystrophic – like idiopathic
o dystrophic
▪ short, sharp
▪ 4-6 spinal levels
▪ MC
▪ scalloping of vert end plates, foraminal enlargement, pecilling of ribs
▪ resistant to brace
- Pseudarthrosis
o prophylactic total contact bracing to prevent
- Plexiform neurofibroma
- Dural ectasia
- neurofibrosarcoma transformation results if somatic mutation in nl copy of gene
Hereditary Multiple Exostosis
- AD, 1 in 50,000
- transf to malign CHSA/OSA 3%
- mutations in EXT1 or EXT2
o encode glycosyltransferases
o localized to Golgi apparatus
o responsible for synthesis of heparin sulfate GAGs
o EXT1 necessary for diffusion of hedgehog protein
- Knudsen “two-hit” model of tumor suppressor gene inactivation
o both copies of gene must be inactivated to abolish nl tumor supp act
Morquio’s
- Mucopolysaccharodosis
- AR
- Short stature (proportional)
- Anterior beak at TL spine
- 2nd-5th MC narrow
- Excrete keratan sulfate in urine
- C1-2 instability common
- Genu valgum
- Severe hip deformity
- Physeal involvement (like Perthes’)
Hurler’s
- corneal clouding, deafness HSM, CV abn
- BM transplantation
Gaucher’s Disease
- AR
- HSM
- Glucocerebrosidase def
- AVN hips, mimics Perthes
- Tx: enzyme replacement can be successful
Marfan’s
- Fibrillin
- Chromosome 15
- Lens dislocation – superior and lateral
- Arm span > height
- arachnodactyly
- Mitral valve prolapse
- Scoliosis
o Mortality for surgery very high
Cleidocranial dysplasia
- Coxa vara
- AD
- Broad forehead, phalanx shortening, short stature
- Wormian bones in skull
- Clavicle malformation (looks like pseudarthrosis of clavicle)
- Dislocation of hips, knees
o Coxa vara
- CBFA1 abnormality
o Important in osteoblast differentiation
Nail-Patella Syndrome
- AD
- Dysplatic nails, hypoplastic patella
- Mutation in LMX1B
o Determines nl dorsoventral pattern in limb bud
- 30% renal failure
- post dislocation of radial head
Down’s
- Trisomy 21
- Ligamentous hyperlaxity
- Patellofemoral instability
o Surg difficult b/c ligam hyperlax
o No surgery
- Tx cervical spine
o 10% w/ Asx AAI
o > 10 mm instability or neuro sx, then PSF
▪ if < 10 mm, asx, then can do sports
- Tx hips
o Should operate
o common to have dislocation with mild dysplastic hips
Turner’s
- phenotypically females
- XO
- Mutation in SHOX gene
- short stature, webbed neck, low hairline
- scoliosis similar to idiopathic curves
JRA
- Ass w/ uveitis
OI
- AD for the most part, AR are lethal
- Type I collagen defect
- Familial
- Blue sclerae
- Multiple fx
- Long bone deformities
- Tx: bracing, multiple osteotomies, IM nails
Ollier’s Dz
- Multiple enchondromatosis
- LE deformity
- Genu valgum
- Mafucci’s syndrome
o w/ hemangiomas
Child abuse
- Mult fx in various stages of healing
- Corner fx (distal femur, prox tibia)
o Torsional mechanism
- Multiple bruises
- Unreasonable stories
- Any fx in infants
Physeal fx
- Zone of provisional calcification
o Pliable area of growth plate
- CR and cast
- SH III, IV, may require ORIF
- For open injuries
o Joint articulation preferable to prevent overgrowth
- Complications
o Physeal arrest (completed vs. partial)
o Angular deformity tx
▪ bar resection w/ interposition if
• > 2cm growth remaining
• < 50% physeal involvement (MRI)
▪ ipsilateral epiphysiodesis if
• > 50% physeal involvement
▪ contralateral epiphysiodesis vs. ipsilateral lengthening
Physeal Zone Abnormalities
- Reserve Zone –
o Gaucher’s, Diastrophic dwarfism, Kneist syndrome, Pseudoachondroplasia
- Proliferative Zone
o Achondroplasia, gigantism
- Hypertrophic Zone
o Rickets, osteomalacia –Enchondromas –Mucopolysaccharidoses (Morquio’s, Hurler’s) –SCFE
o Physeal fractures (Zone of Provisional Calcification)
Tillaux Fx
- SER mechanism
- Dist tib physis closes centrally, then medially, then laterally
Monteggia Fx
- Tx: CR, casting
- Ulnar osteotomy to correct malunion essential in tx missed Monteggia fx
Galeazzi fx
- Tx: CR, casting, but more often will need ORIF
SCH fx
- Nerve injury
o AIN MC in extension
o Ulnar MC in flexion
o Posteromed fx – radial nerve at risk
o Posterolat fx – medial n, brach A at risk
- Divergent lateral pins similar stability to cross pins on extension, varus and valgus (not for axial stress)
- Extension type MC
- Complications
o Varus malunion
▪ Inc inc of ulnar neuropathy, late lateral condyle fx, PL rotatory instability
o Nerve palsy
o Vascular issues
▪ If still out after reduction, then arteriogram vs. exploration
- Compartments
o Deep volar sign more elevated than others – reduction did not improve
o Rose w/ elbow flexion > 90 deg
Lateral condyle fx
- Splint, cast, but FOLLOW closely!
- Leads to cubitus valgus
- Displaced, then ORIF
- Blood supply is posterior
Medial condyle fx
- 5-15 mm displacement heal well
- High rate of complications (ON of trochlea, nonunion, fixation failure, stiffness)
Forearm fx
- sign decrease in bone mass found in children w/ FA fx age 9-16 compared to controls
- postural balance scores poorer in fx group
- in snowboarding, wrist guards lowered incidence of wrist injuries
Distal Radius fx
- pt w/ median N. sx better tx w/ CRPP than with cast
- 4% of DRF, 50% of distal ulna fx w/ growth discrepancies > 1 cm
Scaphoid fx
- MRI can detect occult fx
- Waist fx in children same risks of ON as adult
- Compl rates in cast vs. surgery are equal
Tendon Lacerations
- no differences in total active motion b/w pt tx w/ early mobilization and casting for 4 wks
- in FPL repairs, long-term limited motion of IP jt occurred in 1/3 of pt
o short splint immob – neg effect on outcome
o zone of injury, early mob, digital nerve injury – no effect on outcome
Trigger Finger
- trigger fingers have higher rate of spont resolution and earlier age of onset than trigger thumb
- 50% of pt undergoing simple A1 pulley release will have residual triggering (more to release)
Hemophilia
- Hemorrhage into iliacus muscle
- Compresses femoral nerve
- Parasthesias in saphenous N. branch
- 1st dose of clotting factor elevates level to 80% of nl
- If jt bleeds 3x in 6 mo, then chronic synovitis
- Synovectemy if bleeding despite 3 mo of prophylaxis, or resumption of bleeding w/in 1 yr of successful prophylaxis
o Can inject P32 chromic phosphate into jt – radionuclide synovectemy
▪ Reduces freq of bleeds by 50%
▪ Best for pt w/ inhibitor (IgG response to clotting factor)
Sickle Cell Dz
- single subst of valine for glutamic acid at 6th AA position
- hydroxyurea can decrease painful episodes
- bone infarcts 50x MC when compared to others
- serum procalcitonin concentration is negative predictor of MS infx
Thalessemia
- SCFE and early OA @ increased rates
Thrombocytopenia w/ Absent Radii
- moratlity in early infancy 40%
- Muscle starts on humeral shaft and inserts into hand (brachiocarpalis) – excision recommended to prevent radial deviation of hand
- Knee involvement – genu varum, patella abn
o Should be called TARK
Sports
- MRI can be as accurate in children as in adults
- < 12 yo, MRI lower in sens/spec
- teenager w/ skel age 14 yr or older, Tanner stage 4/5 can be considered skel mature
- > 2 cm growth remaining, consider hamstring recon
- tears < 50%, nonsurgical
- meniscus w/ high false + rate b/c inc vascularity of meniscus in children
- ACL tears have 50% ass meniscal tear
|Dx |Gene/Inheritance |Defining Characteristics |
|Homocystinuria |AR |Lens dislocation—Inferior |
|(looks like Marfan’s | |Mental retardation |
|but with inferior | |Tall, thin |
|dislocation, stiff | |No family history |
|joints, and | |Dx: UA for |
|osteoporosis). | |homocysteine—defect in |
| | |cystathionine B-synthase |
| | |leads to too much |
| | |homocysteine |
| | |Rx: Vit B6, no methionine |
| | |in diet |
|NF-I |AD/neurofibrillin |Scoliosis |
| |Variable penetrance |Pseudoarthrosis tibia (AL |
| |High rate new mut. |bowing) |
| | |Multiple NOF |
| | |Multiple neurofibromas |
|Gaucher’s Dz |AR/glucocerebrosidase |Most common lysosomal |
| | |storage dz |
| | |AVN of femoral head |
| | |Pathologic fractures |
| | |Thrombocytopenia |
| | |(Splenectomy) |
| | |Enlarged distal metaphyseal|
| | |area (Erlenmeyer flask |
| | |deformity) |
| | |No MR |
|Marfan’s |AD/fibrillin (Ch 15) |Lens dislocation—superior |
| | |(60%) |
| | |MVP, aortic dissection |
| | |Laxity, scoliosis (60%) |
| | |Long thin limbs |
| | |Pectus deformity |
|Larsen’s |AD&R |Multiple joint dislocations|
|(type of | |Scoliosis, clubfeet, cerv. |
|arthrogryposis) | |kyphosis |
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