Bowman Eric N, Mehlman Charles T, Lindsell Christopher J, Tamai Junichi
University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
J Pediatr Orthop. 2011 Jan-Feb;31(1):23-32. doi: 10.1097/BPO.0b013e318203205b.
Forearm shaft fractures are the third most common fracture in children. Although closed reduction and casting is the preferred treatment; outcomes remain variable. The purpose of this study was to identify factors associated with failure of nonoperative treatment for pediatric complete forearm shaft fractures and to explore the time frame in which failure is likely.
Male patients less than 18 years and female patients less than 17 years of age, who were treated for a complete both-bone forearm shaft fracture between January 2005 and January 2008, were included. A pediatric orthopaedic surgeon evaluated all radiographs to confirm the diagnosis. Fractures were classified as proximal, middle, or distal, based one-third division of the shaft. Thresholds for maximum acceptable angulation for male patients < 10 years and female patients < 8 years were as follows: 10 degrees for proximal-third, 15 degrees for middle-third, 20 degrees for distal-third fractures; for female patients ≥ 8 years and male patients ≥ 10 years, up to 10 degrees was considered acceptable at all the levels. Angulation was measured at initial presentation and at weekly intervals for 4 weeks post fracture. Anteroposterior measurements accounted for the natural bow of the radius. Multivariable logistical regression was performed to identify predictors of failure.
Of the 321 patients identified, 282 underwent closed reduction and casting. The average age of patients was 8.5 years, 63% were male. Fifty-one percent of patients exceeded angulation criteria within the follow-up period. Of those who failed, 55% failed by the end of the first week, and 95% failed by 3 weeks. Odds of failure was greatest in patients ≥ 10 years (odds ratio (OR)=2.79; confidence interval (CI) 95, 1.47-5.29), those with proximal radius fractures (OR=6.81; CI95, 3.28-14.14), and those with initial ulna angulations < 15 degrees (OR=2.94; CI95, 1.49-5.83).
Children with 10 years of age or older, with proximal-third radius fractures, and ulna angulation <15 degrees seem to be at highest risk for failure when treated nonoperatively for both-bone forearm fractures. As the majority of failures occur early, early surgical decision-making is encouraged.
Prognostic Level II.
尺骨干骨折是儿童中第三常见的骨折。尽管闭合复位和石膏固定是首选治疗方法,但治疗结果仍存在差异。本研究的目的是确定与小儿完全性尺骨干骨折非手术治疗失败相关的因素,并探讨可能出现失败的时间框架。
纳入2005年1月至2008年1月期间接受完全性双骨尺骨干骨折治疗的年龄小于18岁的男性患者和年龄小于17岁的女性患者。一名小儿骨科医生评估所有X线片以确诊。根据骨干的三分之一划分,骨折分为近端、中段或远端。10岁以下男性患者和8岁以下女性患者最大可接受成角的阈值如下:近端三分之一为10度,中段三分之一为15度,远端三分之一骨折为20度;对于8岁及以上女性患者和10岁及以上男性患者,所有水平最大10度被认为是可接受的。在初次就诊时以及骨折后4周内每周测量成角。前后位测量考虑了桡骨的自然弧度。进行多变量逻辑回归以确定失败预测因素。
在确定的321例患者中,282例接受了闭合复位和石膏固定。患者的平均年龄为8.5岁,63%为男性。51%的患者在随访期间超过了成角标准。在那些失败的患者中,55%在第一周结束时失败,95%在3周内失败。10岁及以上患者(优势比(OR)=2.79;95%置信区间(CI),1.47 - 5.29)、近端桡骨骨折患者(OR=6.81;CI95,3.28 - 14.14)以及初始尺骨成角小于15度的患者(OR=2.94;CI95,1.49 - 5.83)失败的几率最高。
10岁及以上、近端三分之一桡骨骨折且尺骨成角小于15度的儿童在接受双骨前臂骨折非手术治疗时似乎失败风险最高。由于大多数失败发生在早期,因此鼓励早期进行手术决策。
预后II级。