The purpose of this prospective clinical study was to identify the true incidence, pattern, and location of the injury and nature of fracture after hand injuries in different pediatric age groups attending a hand unit. Three hundred sixty children (237 boys, 123 girls) under 16 years of age who presented with hand injuries between April 1, 2000, and Sept. 30, 2000, were included in the study. Bony injuries accounted for 65.5% (236 injuries); 33.3% (120 injuries) were soft tissue injuries. The projected annual incidence rate for skeletal injuries was 418/100,000 children. The incidence was low in toddlers (34/100,000), more than doubled in preschool children (73/100,000), and steeply increased to around 20-fold after the 10th year (663/100,000). Girls had a higher incidence of hand injuries among toddlers and preschool children. Crushing was the most common cause of hand injury (64%), and most injuries were sustained at home (45%). Toddlers sustained soft tissue injuries predominantly (86%) and older children sustained more bony injuries (77%). Sport was the cause of injures commonly in the older children. There was a higher incidence of fracture in the little finger (52%) followed by the thumb (23%). The proximal phalanx was the most frequently fractured bone (67%) among the phalanges. Diaphyseal fractures (46%) were more common in the metacarpals, and basal fractures (51%) were common in the phalanges. At discharge more than 80% of the patients felt that they were cured or significantly better. This paper highlights the changing pattern and the different varieties of hand injuries in different pediatric age groups.
Subscapular space is an uncommon site for abscess formation. There are only seven reports of subscapular abscesses in the literature. Only three of these cases are reported in children. We recently treated a child with subscapular abscess. We performed the literature search using a combination of the keywords: subscapular, scapular, abscess and infection. One case was diagnosed on post-mortem autopsy, and only three of these cases are reported in children. The organism was Staphylococcus aureus in five cases (two were methicillin-resistant S. aureus), Haemophilus influenzae in one case, and no organism was grown in the last case. (Patient received a course of empirical antibiotics and samples did not grow any organism.) We describe a case of spontaneous subscapular abscess in a 7-year-old boy. The abscess was visualised on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and the organism was identified as S. aureus bacteria. The abscess was treated surgically with debridement and antibiotics, and the patient had full recovery with no subsequent effects. Subscapular abscess needs high index of suspicion and early imaging investigation. MRI is the modality of choice for accurate diagnosis. Early intervention leads to favourable outcome, while delays in diagnosis can be fatal.
Back pain is a major cause of disability worldwide. A case of a 29 year old Caucasian woman with low back pain secondary to an uncommon benign condition called osteitis condensans ilii is presented and the literature is reviewed. Limited information in the literature combined with poor awareness across the specialty and among the primary care physicians leads to an extensive investigation and misdiagnosis of this benign condition. This report emphasis the salient features and the differential diagnosis in diagnosing and managing this rare condition.
Internal snapping often resolves with conservative treatment but persistent significant symptoms may require surgical treatment. Different surgical approaches have been suggested in the literature with varying results. We describe a modified surgical approach for internal snapping of hip in adults with good results. Patients who failed conservative treatment for internal snapping over 11/2 years were included. A skin crease incision was made just lateral to the ASIS in supine position. The psoas tendon was reached sub-periosteally along the internal iliac surface and a hole was made in periosteum. Then the tendon was hooked into the wound and divided releasing its musculotendinous junction. The patients were allowed to mobilise as able in the postoperative period. There were 8 snapping hips (7 patients, 6 females) with average age of 30 years (17-51 yrs). The mean follow-up was 11 months. The average duration of symptoms before operation was 4.5 years (range 2-10 years). Painful symptomatic clicking was relieved in all patients. Two patients felt slight weakness of hip flexion. One patient had temporary neuropraxia of lateral cutaneous nerve of thigh. The diagnosis is made by ultrasound or examination for a palpable click. Surgical correction of snapping is considered after failure of conservative treatment. Different extrapelvic (medial and iliofemoral) and intrapelvic extraperitoneal approaches have been described with varying results. With our slightly modified intrapelvic and subperiosteal approach through oblique inguinal incision in adults, psoas muscle release at musculotendinous junction seems a safe and effective method and could be used as an alternative surgical approach for treatment of internal snapping of hip in adults.
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