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1.
J Pediatr Orthop B ; 2023 Oct 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37909866

ABSTRACT

Abuse should be suspected in infant femoral fractures without significant trauma, especially if the child is non-ambulatory. Review the epidemiological and radiological characteristics of femoral fractures in children under 36 months old to identify those potentially related to child abuse. Cases involving 102 patients presenting with 103 femoral fractures between January 1990 and December 2020 were investigated, paying close attention to mechanisms of injury, fracture patterns, and their possible relations to child abuse. The annual incidence of femoral fractures in patients under 36 months old was estimated at 24.6 per 100 000; the incidence in infants under 13 months was significantly higher than among children between 13 and 36 months old. Most infants under 13 months suffered from transverse or oblique metaphyseal/diaphyseal fractures (93.2%), whereas 67.8% of older children presented with spiral shaft fractures. Data confirmed child abuse in 4.9% of all patients (one with bilateral fractures); femoral fractures were incompatible with their reported mechanisms of injury in 31 patients (30.4%), whereas 12 fractures (11.8%) occurred in unexplained circumstances. More than 50% of femoral fractures occurred with low-energy trauma. The difference in patterns according to patients' ages suggested different mechanisms of trauma in ambulatory and non-ambulatory infants. Confirmed abuses and unclear or inconsistent mechanisms of trauma, raised potential total child abuse cases to 47.1% of our cohort. Level of evidence: Level IV.

2.
J Child Orthop ; 17(4): 348-353, 2023 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37565007

ABSTRACT

Background: Ankle fracture is one of the most frequent pediatric lower-limb fractures and may result in serious complications. Objective: This study aimed to determine the epidemiology of ankle fractures, defining fracture types, treatments, and complications in a pediatric population below 16 years old. Methods: Medical records of all the ankle fracture patients treated in our hospital during 2004-2020 were retrospectively reviewed. Data regarding age, sex, mechanism of injury, fracture type, treatment modalities, and complications were collected. Results: We examined records involving 328 children with 331 ankle fractures, with a ratio of 1:2 male per female. Mean annual prevalence was 24.3 per 100,000 children. Mean patient age was 11.2 ± 4.2 years, with 75.3% of them aged over 10 years. Sports activities accounted for the largest percentage of fractures (162 cases; 49.4%), followed by falls (67; 20.4%) and road traffic accidents (37; 11.3%). Physeal fractures were the most frequent type of lesion (223 cases). Most ankle fractures (60%) were managed using closed reduction and casting; for the remaining 40% of cases, fracture fixation was performed after closed or open reduction to correct the articular step-off and ensure the anatomical restoration of the physis. The main ankle fracture complication was premature growth arrest (12.1% of all physeal fractures). Conclusion: Pediatric ankle fractures primarily affect children older than 10 years. Most of these fractures were caused by sports injuries or low-energy trauma. The majority of these fractures are physeal, and the distal tibial physis is affected 10 times more frequently than the distal fibular physis. Level of evidence: Level III.

4.
Front Pediatr ; 10: 1046254, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36568420

ABSTRACT

Background and Objectives: Most cases of spondylodiscitis in children aged between 6 and 48 months old could be caused primarily by K. kingae. The present prospective study aimed to determine whether an innovative and indirect diagnosis approach - based on detection of K. kingae DNA in the oropharynx of children with suspected spondylodiscitis - provides sufficient evidence that this microorganism is responsible for the infection. Methods: We prospectively analysed infants admitted for spondylodiscitis, considering above all the results of PCR realized in oropharyngeal swabs and in blood samples. Results: Four of the 29 performed K. kingae-specific real-time PCR assay in blood were positive (13.8%), whereas 28 of the 32 K. kingae-specific real-time PCR assay realized on throat swabs were positive (87.5%). Conclusions: This study demonstrates that performing oropharyngeal swab PCR is able to detect K. kingae in almost 90% of the toddlers with confirmed spondylodiscitis. That provides strong arguments for the hypothesis that K. kingae should be considered as the main aetiological pathogen to suspect in children between 6 and 48 months old with spondylodiscitis. Finally, it seems to us reasonable that oropharyngeal swab may become an early decision-making tool for the indirect identification of K. kingae in spondylodiscitis.

5.
Pediatr Infect Dis J ; 41(2): e62-e63, 2022 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34840310

ABSTRACT

The authors report a rare case of an unusual primary pyomyositis of the biceps cruralis assigned to Kingella kingae in a 21-month-old girl. The reported case demonstrated that primary pyomyositis may be encountered during invasive infection due to K. kingae even if this manifestation remains rare. This bacterial etiology must, therefore, be evoked when a primary pyomyositis is observed, and this is in particular in children under 4 years of age.


Subject(s)
Kingella kingae , Neisseriaceae Infections , Pyomyositis , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Female , Humans , Infant , Knee/diagnostic imaging , Knee/physiopathology , Neisseriaceae Infections/diagnosis , Neisseriaceae Infections/drug therapy , Neisseriaceae Infections/physiopathology , Oropharynx/microbiology , Pyomyositis/diagnosis , Pyomyositis/drug therapy , Pyomyositis/physiopathology
6.
Microorganisms ; 10(1)2021 Dec 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35056474

ABSTRACT

Nowadays, Kingella kingae (K. kingae) is considered as the main bacterial cause of osteoarticular infections (OAI) in children aged less than 48 months. Next to classical acute hematogenous osteomyelitis and septic arthritis, invasive K. kingae infections can also give rise to atypical osteoarticular infections, such as cellulitis, pyomyositis, bursitis, or tendon sheath infections. Clinically, K. kingae OAI are usually characterized by a mild clinical presentation and by a modest biologic inflammatory response to infection. Most of the time, children with skeletal system infections due to K. kingae would not require invasive surgical procedures, except maybe for excluding pyogenic germs' implication. In addition, K. kingae's OAI respond well even to short antibiotics treatments, and, therefore, the management of these infections requires only short hospitalization, and most of the patients can then be treated safely as outpatients.

7.
JBJS Case Connect ; 8(3): e60, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30095469

ABSTRACT

CASE: We report the case of an 11-year-old girl who developed osteonecrosis of the femoral head in the radiographically normal, asymptomatic left hip that had been fixed prophylactically in the context of a slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE) that had been detected on the contralateral hip. The etiology of the osteonecrosis remains unknown. CONCLUSION: This case report demonstrates that prophylactic fixation of a radiographically normal, asymptomatic hip in the context of an SCFE on the contralateral side has the potential for substantial complications. Therefore, the risk of osteonecrosis in the prophylactically pinned hip should be carefully considered because this complication may have devastating functional consequences.


Subject(s)
Femur Head Necrosis/etiology , Orthopedic Procedures/adverse effects , Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphyses/prevention & control , Child , Female , Femur Head Necrosis/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Iatrogenic Disease , Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphyses/diagnostic imaging
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