Fracture of the femoral neck is a rare injury in children but remains difficult problem and challenge with high rate of complications. Having in mind recommendations of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, our effort was to improve treatment approach. In the period 1999 to 2004, five patients, aged 5 to 14 years, were treated by closed reduction and percutaneous pinning. All patients sustained high energy trauma and displaced femoral neck fractures, out of which two were transcervical, two cervicotrochanteric and one intertrochanteric. Procedures were performed under image amplifier. Hip decompression was achieved by needle aspiration via a subadductor approach. Three smooth Kirschner wires appeared to be stable and least aggressive fixation device, easy for applying and subsequent removal. We insisted on urgent treatment, anatomic alignment, stabile fixation and hip decompression. Excellent results were obtained in four patients who had undergone immediate treatment. Poor outcome with vascular necrosis in a five-year-old girl was attributed to five-day treatment delay. Suggested treatment, simple and applicable in practice, is aimed at reducing pathologic mechanisms crucial for development of complications.
Osteoid osteoma is a small benign bone lesion. It generally affects children and young adults. Traditional treatment of osteoid osteoma includes excision either by wide resection, or by the removal of the nidus using curettes and burrs after opening the overlying cortex. Newly developed techniques involve percutaneous ablation of the tumor by computed tomography-guided core-drill excision and destruction of the nidus by thermocoagulation. Fluoroscopic guided percutaneous extirpation and drilling resection procedures have been performed at the Institute for Health Care of Children and Youth, Pediatric Surgery Clinic in Novi Sad, Serbia. Some modifications in the methods were made and implemented, which resulted in an excellent cost-benefit ratio, shorter period of hospitalization, and faster recovery. The aim of this paper is to present the experience gained in the treatment of osteoid osteomas in the last 5 years at the Pediatric Surgery Clinic in Novi Sad and to describe the modifications to the percutaneous biopsy technique of osteoid osteoma that have been implemented.
One of the most complex and most difficult congenital anomalies is spina bifida. Peter Van Forest was the first one who noticed this anomaly in 1587, and Recklinghausen, in 1886, classified spina bifida to types and suggested surgical procedures for its management. Earlier name, spina bifida, is currently more and more replacing with a term "defect of neural tube" (NTDs), or even more, "spinal dysraphia". Anomaly can appear at any level of spinal cord (cervical, thoracal, lumbar and sacral) and posterior localization is more often than the anterior one. Contrary to the open spinal dysraphism that can be perceived immediately, closed spinal dysraphism is very deceiving anomaly, and therefore, it must be treated properly as soon as it is diagnosed. Because of its seclusion, the term usually used is "occult spinal dysraphism (OSD)". The incidence of this anomaly is unknown, but it has been reported that it is more common among female children. Etiology of OSD is also unknown, but some of its risk factors are as follows: previous pregnancy with NTD, partner with NTD, type 1 diabetes mellitus, usage of anticonvulsives, a lack of folates in mother's nutrition. Prenatal diagnose of OSD is practically impossible. Skin changes, orthopedic, urological and neurological problems, suggest considering this complex anomaly. X-ray, ECHO, MRI, as well as neuropsychological examination corroborate diagnosis. At the same time, the diagnosis (once it is confirmed) represents the indication for neurosurgical treatment.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.