Title: Proximal Humeral Fracture in Children
1Proximal Humeral Fracturein Children
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2Developmental AnatomyOssification Centers
Physes
- scapular ossification centers acromion,
coracoid, glenoid, medial border - proximal humeral physis tent shaped, 80 of
longitudinal growth - medial clavicular physis last to close 23-25 yrs
3Clavicle Fracture
- most common fx in children
- 50 in lt10 yo
- usually midshaft
- almost always heals, usually clinically
insignificant malunion - remodels within 1 year
- complications very uncommon
4Clavicle Fracture Patterns
- most in middle
- 5 distal
- lt 5 medial
- greenstick common
- beware nutrient foramen- not a fx
5Clavicle Birth Fracture
- large baby
- pseudoparalysis
- simple immobilization
- if no BP palsy active movement should return
early
6Congenital Pseudarthrosis of the Clavicle
- right side
- except with dextrocardia
- if symptomatic in older child excise,
tricortical graft, fixation
7Distal Clavicle Fracture
- often intact periosteum
- usually remodels
- nonoperative tx
8Distal Clavicle Fractures- Classification
- similar to adults
- based on amount direction of displacement
9Distal Clavicle Injuries Periosteal Sleeve
10Medial Clavicular Injuries
- medial clavicular physis last to close 22-24 yo
- clavicle shaft usually anterior
- may displace posteriorly
- serendipity view or CT if suspect
11Scapula Fractures
- may be a sign of significant trauma
- usually nonoperative treatment
- growth centers may be confused with fracture
- axillary view often helpful
coracoid base fracture
12Scapula Fractures - Classification
- can have fracture through common growth center of
coracoid and glenoid
13Scapula Fractures - Classification
- body
- neck
- glenoid
- acromion
- coracoid
- intraarticular / extrarticular
14Glenohumeral Dislocations
- rare in children lt 12 years old
- high risk of recurrent instability when initial
dislocation occurs in childhood or adolescence - anterior, Posterior or Inferior direction
- traumatic or atraumatic etiology
15Glenoid Dysplasia
- may predispose to instability
- may be primary or secondary (after brachial
plexus palsy)
16Traumatic Shoulder Dislocation
- gentle reduction
- immobilization for approx 3 weeks
- shoulder rehabilitation
- surgical stabilization /reconstruction reserved
for recurrent instability
17Atraumatic Instability
- often multiple joint ligamentous laxity
- multidirectional instability usually present
- may be voluntary (discourage)
- rotator cuff strengthening
18Proximal Humeral Fracture
- birth injuries
- 0-5 yo SH I
- 5-11 yo metaphyseal
- 11-maturity SH II
- others rare (III, IV)
19- proximal humeral epiphysis does not ossify until
about age 6 months - fusion occurs at about age 15 in girls and 17 in
boys. -
20- shape of the physis is conical, with the apex
pointing postermedial - medial metaphysis is intra-articular
- fractures of the proximal humerus lt 5 of
children's fractures - birth injuries are transphyseal, with the
proximal humeral epiphysis not yet ossified at
birth, the malalignment of the shaft to the
glenoid is the only radiographic finding
21Proximal Humeral Physeal Fractures Neer
Horowitz Classification
- grade I lt 5 mm
- grade II lt 1/3 shaft width
- grade III lt 2/3 shaft width
- grade IV gt 2/3 shaft width
22- pull of rotator cuff subscapularis on proximal
fragment leave it abducted, flexed, and
externally rotated - pectoralis major pulls the distal fragment into
adduction - Dameron's acceptable reduction recommendation of
20 degrees in the older child is often quoted - nonoperative treatment is favored for all
fractures
23- remodeling potential of proximal humerus is
perhaps the most impressive in the body
mobility of shoulder surely compensates for
residual deformity at skeletal maturity - treatment options
- manipulation and immobilization in sling
swathe - closed reduction and percutaneous pinning
- open reduction
- no reduction using simply symptomatic
immobilization with arm in sling swathe
24Treatment
- closed treatment for vast majority
- if markedly displaced, attempt closed reduction
and immobilize - reserve closed reduction and pinning, open
reduction for fractures with significant
displacement (gt Neer II) in older adolescents,
recurrent displacement
25- reduction with traction, abduction, and flexion
has been described, but with the generous
remodeling potential of this site, good results
are uniform - proximal humeral fractures primarily are seen in
infancy and adolescents - fractures prior to adolescence are more often
metaphyseal - in adolescent, primarily physeal injuries, the
vast majority Type II
26J Bone Joint Surg Am. 196951289-297. THOMAS B.
DAMERON, JR. and DONALD B. REIBEL
27Proximal Humerus Acceptable Alignment
- great remodeling potential 80 of humeral
length contributed by proximal physis - shoulder ROM compensatory
- age dependent? some studies state that even
older adolescents have acceptable functional
outcomes after nonoperative treatment of prox
humerus fxs
28Early Healing Noted 3 Weeks after Closed
Reduction in Adolescent
3 weeks after closed reduction
initial film
29Metaphyseal Fracture
30Remodeling over 6 Months
31Pinning Proximal Humerus
- usually dont need to
- most recent studies quote high complication rates
(pin migration, infection) - if used leave pins long and bend outside skin,
consider threaded tip pins - even in older adolescents remodeling occurs
- few functional deficits
32Percutaneous Pinningmay lead to pin migration
33Pinning
- bend pins to prevent migration
- threaded tips
34Complications of Proximal Humerus Fractures
- malunion with loss of shoulder ROM rarely
functionally significant - shortening up to 3 -4 cm seemingly well
tolerated - neurologic vascular compromise less common than
in adults
35Humeral Shaft Fractures in Children
- neonates - birth trauma
- birth- 3 yrs - consider possible non-accidental
trauma - 3-12 yrs - often pathologic fracture through
benign bone tumor or cyst - gt12 yrs - treatment like adults
36Birth Fractures
- simple immobilization
- pseudoparalysis
- little attention to realignment or reduction
needed
37Pathologic Humeral Fracture - UBC
fallen leaf sign also pseudosubluxation
inferiorly
38Humeral Shaft Fractures- Treatment
- usually closed methods
- sling and swathe
- coaptation splint
- fracture bracing
- hanging arm cast
39Shoulder Immobilization- Coaptation Splint
40Humeral Shaft Outcomes
- malunion common, but usually little functional
loss - remodels well
- initial fx shortening may be compensated for by
later overgrowth - nonunion uncommon
- radial nerve palsy less common, if occurs usually
neuropraxia
41Indications for Open ReductionShoulder Region
Fractures
- open fractures
- displaced intraarticular fractures
- multiple trauma to facilitate rehabilitation
- severe displacement with suspected soft tissue
interposition
42Thank You