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Journal Article

Citation

Johnson K, Chapman S, Hall CM. Pediatr. Radiol. 2004; 34(8): 620-623.

Affiliation

Department of Radiology, Birmingham Children's Hospital, Steelhouse Lane, Birmingham, B4 6NH, UK. karl.johnson@bch.nhs.uk

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s00247-004-1216-6

PMID

15156299

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Sexual abuse is often associated with physical abuse, the most common injuries being bruising and other soft-tissue injuries, but fractures occur in 5% of sexually abused children. The fractures described to date have formed part of the spectrum of injuries in these children and have not been specifically related to the abusive act. OBJECTIVE: To describe concurrent sexual abuse and fractures. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Three children with pelvic or femoral shaft injuries in association with sexual abuse. RESULTS: A 3-year-old girl with extensive soft-tissue injuries to the arms, legs and perineum also sustained fractures of both pubic rami and the sacral side of the right sacro-iliac joint. A 5-month-old girl with an introital tear was shown to have an undisplaced left femoral shaft fracture. A 5-year-old girl presented with an acute abdomen and pneumoperitoneum due to a ruptured rectum following sexual abuse. She had old healed fractures of both pubic rami with disruption of the symphysis pubis. CONCLUSIONS: Although the finding of a perineal injury in a young child may be significant enough for the diagnosis of abuse, additional skeletal injuries revealed by radiography will assist in confirmation of that diagnosis and may be more common than hitherto suspected.


Language: en

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