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The Limping Child

The Limping Child. AAPA. Definition. Limp = Asymmetry Joint - Range of motion Bone - Deformity Pain Control. The Limping Child. Diagnosis Mechanism. ADULT. TEENAGER. PRE-TEEN. AGE. 5. CHILD. TODDLER. INFANT. NEWBORN. The Limping Child. Pitfalls

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The Limping Child

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  1. The Limping Child AAPA

  2. Definition Limp = Asymmetry • Joint - Range of motion • Bone - Deformity • Pain • Control

  3. The Limping Child • Diagnosis • Mechanism

  4. ADULT TEENAGER PRE-TEEN AGE 5 CHILD TODDLER INFANT NEWBORN The Limping Child • Pitfalls • Being misled by the parents’ analysis • Always a leg length discrepancy • Being misled by the patient’s complaint • Hip problems can cause knee pain • Complaints of pain COMPLAINS LIMPS

  5. The Limping Child Causes of limp • Joint - Range of motion • Bone - Deformity • Pain • Hip • Control -Physical exam -X-ray -‘Antalgic’ gait -Abductor lurch -Upper limb

  6. The Limping Child Too much to cover Hip Best Bets Age

  7. The Limping Child • Age 1 – 3 years • Age 3 – 6 years • Age 6 – 10 years • Age 10 – 14 years

  8. The Limping Child:Age 1 – 3 1 Best Bet • DDH • Developmental Dysplasia of the Hip • CDH • Congenital Dislocation of the Hip

  9. The Limping Child: Age 1 – 3DDH Physical findings • Girl • Asymmetrical skin folds • Limited abduction • Short leg • Pistoning • Ortolani’s sign • Barlow’s sign

  10. The Limping Child: Age 1 – 3DDH X-ray findings • Delayed appearance of ossific nucleus • Small ossific nucleus • Dysplastic acetabulum • Proximal displacement of femur

  11. The Limping Child: Age 1 – 3DDH • Pavlik Harness • Check at 3 weeks to confirm reduction • Adjust position every 6 – 12 weeks • Continue until the hips are clincally and radiologically normal Treatment • 0 – ½: Pavlik harness • ½ – 1½: Closed reduction, cast • 1 ½ - 5 or 8: Open reduction, pelvic osteotomy • Older: Leave dislocated

  12. The Limping Child:Age 3 – 6 2 s Best Bet • Transient synovitis • Septic arthritis • Flu • Tonsillitis

  13. The Limping Child:Age 3 – 6 Transient synovitis • Child refuses to walk • Movement of hip is painful • May have fever • Moderately elevated WBC • Lasts a few days • Disappears without treatment

  14. WIDENED JOINT SPACE The Limping Child:Age 3 – 6 Septic arthritis • Child refuses to walk • Movement of hip is painful • May have fever • Elevated WBC • Progressively sicker • Progressive joint destruction

  15. The Limping Child: Age 3 – 6Septic Arthritis Bacteria White cells Enzymes Enzymes Destroy cartilage Irreversable joint damage

  16. The Limping Child: Age 3 – 6Septic Arthritis The Worst Scenario • Destruction of articular cartilage • Destruction of femoral head • Destruction of femoral neck

  17. The Limping Child: Age 3 – 6Septic Arthritis Treatment • Kill the bacteria • Antibiotics • Eliminate the white cells • Incision and drainage • Don’t delay • 48 hour window

  18. The Limping Child: Age 3 – 6Transient Synovitis vs. Septic Arthritis • How to tell the difference? • Four predictors • History of fever • Refusal to weight-bear • ESR > 40 mm/hr • WBC > 12,000 • If in doubt • Review in 12 hours • Do incision and drainage! Kocher, Kasser, et al.JBJS 86-A: 1629, 2004

  19. The Limping Child:Age 6 - 10 3 Best Bet Legg-Calvé-Perthes Disease

  20. The Limping Child: Age 6 – 10Perthes Disease Physical findings • Boy • Limp • Antalgic gait • Pain with passive motion • Limited abduction • Positive Trendelenburg sign

  21. The Limping Child: Age 6 – 10Perthes Disease • X-ray findings • Perhaps nothing • MRI • Irregular consistency • Flattening • Lateral bump/ridge • Lateral hinging

  22. The Limping Child: Age 6 – 10Perthes Disease

  23. The Limping Child: Age 6 – 10Perthes Disease Treatment • Maintain range of motion • Physical therapy • Anti-inflammatory medication • “Containment” • Bracing in abduction • Femoral osteotomy • Pelvic osteotomy

  24. The Limping Child: Age 6 – 10Perthes Disease 50% need a Total Hip by age 50

  25. The Limping Child:Age 10 – 14 4 Best Bet Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis(SCFE – skiffey)

  26. The Limping Child: Age 10 – 14SCFE Always get a frog lateral view Always check the other side

  27. The Limping Child: Age 10 – 14SCFE • Pediatric orthopaedic surgeons • See 6 per year • General orthopaedic surgeons • See 1 every 6 years • Same as fixing a fracture

  28. The Limping Child: Age 10 – 14SCFE • Classification • Acute or chronic • Stable or unstable • Severity of displacement • Slip angle • Bilaterality • 10 – 15% at presentation

  29. No reductionOne screw Closed reductionTwo screws Useful Classification • Stable • Walks in • Unstable • Wheels in • Bone in one piece • Slow plastic deformation of the growth plate • Bone in two pieces • Physeal fracture

  30. Unstable SCFE

  31. Xray Findings • Displacement of neck on head • Mainly anterior • Somewhat superior • Decreased projected femoral head height • Chronicity • Inferior new bone • Superior rounding off of metaphysis • Curved neck

  32. CastroAP

  33. Degree of slip?? Silva Chronic Slip

  34. Castro Right Lateral Slip angle

  35. The femoral neck “curves” posteriorly Concept Displacement of head on neck Gradual change in shape

  36. Starting Point – Severe Slips

  37. Correct Path

  38. BLIND SPOT Controlling Depth • Approach Withdraw • Rotate hip through full range • Observe projected distance of pin tip from subchondral bone • Watch for change in direction • That moment presents the critical view

  39. 3–D Geometry The Critical View

  40. Approach-Withdraw 1 1

  41. Approach-Withdraw 2 2

  42. Approach-Withdraw 3 3

  43. Approach-Withdraw 4 4

  44. Approach-Withdraw 5 5

  45. Approach-Withdraw 6 6

  46. Approach-Withdraw 8 7

  47. Approach-Withdraw 7 8

  48. Approach-Withdraw 5 The Critical View 5

  49. The Contralateral Hip • Out of 100 patients: • 10 are bilateral at presentation • 10 will slip on the other side later • 5 will have painless slips on the other side

  50. Follow-up for Bilaterality • Follow radiologically • Every three months • For 18 months

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