PRE HOSPITAL
Immobilization
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Resuscitation for concurrent injuries
- Immobilization
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Management of life-threatening concurrent injuries
- Pain control
- Dislocations require immediate assessment and attention to neurovascular compromise:
- Mechanism helps in understanding the direction of the force required to reduce.
- Alignment is essential, particularly when fracture involves a joint surface.
- Appropriate reporting of NAT
Salter–Harris Fractures
- Type I and type II fractures require immobilization and orthopedic follow-up.
- Type II distal femur fractures, type III, and type IV require urgent orthopedic consultation for anatomic reduction.
- Type V fractures require immobilization and consultation.
- Anatomic reduction does not eliminate possibility of growth disturbance.
Clavicle Fracture
- Figure-of-8 splint or sling for comfort
- Distal 3rd clavicle fractures should be referred with initial sling and swathe or shoulder immobilizer.
Elbow Fracture
- >50% are supracondylar
- 10–15% have neural injury
- May present with only posterior effusion on lateral radiograph
- Orthopedic consultation because of potential neurovascular complications
- Brachial artery injury, median nerve injury possible
- Volar compartment syndrome of forearm (results in Volkmann contracture)
- Epiphyseal injury with long-term growth abnormalities
Distal Radius and Ulna Fractures
- Most common site of pediatric fracture: Distal radius
- Reduce angulated fractures >15°
- Pronator fat pad along volar radius may indicate occult fracture
- Colles fracture:
- Reduce by traction in the line of deformity to disimpact the fragments, followed by pressure on the dorsal aspect of the distal fragment and volar aspect of the proximal fragment.
- Correct radial deviation.
- Immobilize wrist and elbow (sugar-tong splint)
- Orthopedic consultation
- Torus fracture (incomplete fracture; buckling or angulation on the compression side of the bone only):
- Most often in distal forearm
- Greenstick fracture (incomplete fracture of diaphysis of long bone with fracture on tension side of cortex):
- Immobilize.
- Reduction if angulation >30° in infants, >15° in children
Tibia or Fibula Fracture
- Isolated fibular fractures: Short-leg walking cast
- Nondisplaced tibial fracture: Long-leg posterior splint, nonweight bearing
- Displaced tibial fracture and complex fractures require consultation.
- Toddler’s fractures:
- Nondisplaced, oblique, distal tibia fracture
- May need tangential view radiograph or bone scan to diagnose
- Splint if suspect and repeat radiograph in 7–10 days.
- May apply Ottawa Ankle Rules to children
Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis
- Disruption though capital femoral epiphysis
- Need AP and frog-leg x-rays
- Overweight adolescent boys
- May have referred pain to knee, thigh, or groin
- Nonweight bearing with prompt orthopedic follow-up
- Often bilateral
Femur Fracture
- Most common long-bone fracture
Stress Fractures
- Increasingly common
- Insidious onset
- Vague, achy pain
- Usually associated with rigorous activity
- Treatment:
- Selective bracing
- Activity modification
Open Fractures
- Irrigate and dress with moist saline gauze
- Immobilize
- Cefazolin if only small laceration and minimal contamination
- Gentamicin if moderate contamination, high-energy injury, or significant soft tissue injury
- Consider penicillin if concern for clostridia infection (farm injury, fecal or soil contamination)
- Small wounds with minimal soft tissue injury may be treated with oral antibiotics and immobilization in consultation with orthopedist
Child with Limp
- Careful exam and review of systems for signs of rheumatologic disease, infection, or malignancy
- Pediatric patients with leukemia may present with limp as their initial complaint
- CBC, ESR, CRP, arthrocentesis may be indicated
- Transient synovitis vs. septic hip
- More likely septic if:
- Fever
- Elevated ESR/CRP
- WBC elevation
- Refusal to bear weight
MEDICATION
- Acetaminophen: 10–15 mg(kg PO(PR (per rectum) q4–6h; Do not exceed 5 doses/24 h
- Cefazolin: 25–100 mg/kg daily IM/IV q8h
- Gentamicin: 2.5 mg/kg IV/IM q8h or 6.5–7.5 mg/kg IV/IM q24h
- Hematoma block: 1% lidocaine without epinephrine (max. 3–5 mg/kg)
- Ibuprofen: 10 mg/kg PO q6–8h (first-line treatment)
- Morphine: 0.05–0.2 mg/kg SC/IM/IV q2–4h
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- NAT (or per social services)
- Open fracture
- Potential neurovascular compromise/compartment syndrome:
- Condylar or supracondylar humerus fracture
- Femoral shaft
Discharge Criteria
- Uncomplicated fracture: No concurrent injury or neurovascular/compartment compromise
- Follow-up arranged and parents understand injury and management
Issues for Referral
All Salter–Harris fractures should have orthopedic follow-up.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- History is essential in evaluation of NAT
- Undress patient fully especially if suspicion for NAT
- Have a low threshold to splint and/or consult orthopedist
- Pain control is essential and often underdosed.
- Distal radius is often associated with other fractures: Ulna, elbow, carpal bones
ADDITIONAL READING
- Boutis K. Common pediatric fractures treated with minimal intervention.
Pediatr Emerg Care
. 2010;26:152–157.
- Chasm RM, Swencki SA. Pediatric orthopedic emergencies.
Emerg Med Clin North Am
. 2010;28:907–926.
- Laine JC, Kaiser SP, Diab M. High-risk pediatric orthopedic pitfalls.
Emerg Med Clin North Am
. 2010;28:85–102.
- Mathison DJ, Agrawal D. An update on the epidemiology of pediatric fractures.
Pediatr Emerg Care
. 2010;26:594–603.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Conscious Sedation
- C-spine Fractures, Pediatric
- Fractures, Open
- Nursemaid’s Elbow
- Shoulder Dislocation
- Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis
CODES
ICD9
- 803.00 Other closed skull fracture without mention of intracranial injury, unspecified state of consciousness
- 807.00 Closed fracture of rib(s), unspecified
- 829.0 Fracture of unspecified bone, closed
ICD10
- S02.91XA Unsp fracture of skull, init encntr for closed fracture
- S22.39XA Fracture of one rib, unsp side, init for clos fx
- T14.8 Other injury of unspecified body region
FROSTBITE
Joseph M. Weber
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Tissue damage caused by cold temperature exposure
- Mechanism:
- Tissue damage results from:
- Direct cell damage: Intracellular ice crystal formation
- Indirect cell damage: Extracellular ice crystal formation leads to intracellular dehydration and enzymatic disruption.
- Reperfusion injury: Occurs upon rewarming. Fluid rich in inflammatory mediators (prostaglandin and thromboxane) extravasates through damaged endothelium promoting vasoconstriction and platelet aggregation.
- Clear blisters form from extracellular exudation of fluid.
- Hemorrhagic blisters occur when deeper subdermal vessels are disrupted, indicating more severe tissue injury.
- The end result is arterial thrombosis, ischemia, and ultimately, necrosis.
- Devitalized tissue demarcates as the injury evolves over weeks to months, hence the phrase “frostbite in January, amputate in July.”
ETIOLOGY
- Cold exposure: Duration of exposure, wind chill, humidity, and wet skin and clothing all increase the likelihood of frostbite.
- Predisposing factors:
- Extremes of age
- Altered mental status (intoxication or psychiatric illness)
- Poor circulatory status