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Journal Article

Citation

Fortin K, Bertocci G, Nicholas JL, Lorenz DJ, Pierce MC. Child Abuse Negl. 2020; 103: e104396.

Affiliation

Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, 225 E. Chicago Ave, Chicago, Il 60611, United States.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.chiabu.2020.104396

PMID

32135374

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Knowledge of fracture characteristics among children with medical conditions affecting bone could help to distinguish medical causes from child abuse.

OBJECTIVE: Characterize long bone fracture morphology among children diagnosed with medical conditions linked to bone health. PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING: Patients <18 years at a single pediatric hospital diagnosed with a medical condition linked to bone health and ≥1 long bone fracture were studied.

METHODS: This retrospective medical record review categorized underlying medical diagnoses as: metabolic bone disease, genetic disorder of connective tissue, neurologic disorder and other chronic disease. A pediatric radiologist reviewed plain films to determine fracture type and location. Descriptive statistics, as well as logistic regression were used to compare fracture types by clinical characteristics.

RESULTS: Ninety-four patients were included and their diagnoses were genetic connective disorder (19; 20.2 %), metabolic bone disease (16; 17.0 %), neurologic disorder (27; 28.7 %), and other (32; 34.0 %). A total of 216 long bone fractures were sustained; 52.1 % of children had >1 long bone fracture. Of the 216 fractures, 55 (25.5 %) were in children < 1 year, 118 (54.6 %) were associated with known trauma, and 122 (56.5 %) were in non-ambulatory patients. Lower extremity fractures occurred with greatest frequency and most fractures occurred at the mid-diaphysis. Transverse was the most common fracture type in all diagnostic categories. Children with metabolic disorders had highest odds of transverse fracture (COR 3.55, CI 1.45-8.67; neurologic disorders as reference group).

CONCLUSIONS: Diseases affecting bone health can influence fracture morphology. Transverse fractures were most common in bones impacted by disease.

Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Ltd.


Language: en

Keywords

Bone diseases; Children; Fractures

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