Background: Elbow fractures are the most common pediatric fractures requiring operative treatment. To date, few studies have examined what annual factors drive pediatric elbow fracture incidence and no studies have examined which annual factors drive elbow fracture severity or resource utilization. The goal of this study was to not only document the annual patterns of pediatric elbow fracture incidence and severity but also the impact of these patterns on resource utilization in the emergency department, emergency medical service transportation, and the operating room (OR). Methods: Retrospective cohort study of 4414 pediatric elbow fractures from a single tertiary hospital (2007 to 2017). Exclusion criteria included outside treatment or lack of diagnosis by an orthopaedist. Presentation information, injury patterns, transport, and treatment requirements were collected. Pearson correlations were used to analyze factors influencing fracture incidence, severity, and resource utilization.Results: Pediatric elbow fracture incidence positively correlated with monthly daylight hours, but significantly fewer elbow fractures occurred during summer vacation from school compared with surrounding in school months. While fewer overall fractures occurred during summer break, the fractures sustained were greater in severity, conferring higher rates of displacement, higher risk of neurovascular injury, and greater needs for emergency transportation and operative treatment. Yearly, elbow fractures required 320.6 OR hours (7.7% of all pediatric orthopaedic OR time and 12.3% of all pediatric orthopaedic operative procedures), 203.4 hospital admissions, and a total of 4753.7 miles traveled by emergency medical service transportation to manage. All-cause emergency department visits were negatively correlated with daylight hours, inversing the pattern seen in elbow fractures. Conclusion: Increased daylight, while school was in session, was a major driver of the incidence of pediatric elbow fractures. While summer vacation conferred fewer fractures, these were of higher severity. As such, increased daylight correlated strongly with monthly resource utilization, including the need for emergency transportation and operative treatment. This study provides objective data by which providers and administrators can more accurately allocate resources.
Background: Nonaccidental trauma (NAT) is a rising source of morbidity and mortality in the pediatric population. Fractures are often the first cause for presentation to health care providers in the case of NAT but can be misidentified as accidental. Given that elbow fractures are the most common accidental injuries among pediatric patients, they are not traditionally associated with NAT. This study aims to determine the prevalence of NAT among elbow fractures and identify common features in nonaccidental elbow fractures. Methods: Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes were used to retrospectively identify all pediatric (0 to 17) elbow fractures at a single, tertiary children’s hospital between 2007 and 2017. Among these, all fractures for which an institutional child abuse evaluation team was consulted were identified. The medical record was then used to determine which of these fractures were due to NAT. Standard injury radiographs of all victims of NAT as well as all patients under 1 year of age were blinded and radiographically evaluated for fracture type by a pediatric orthopaedic surgeon. Results: The prevalence of nonaccidental elbow fractures across the 10-year study period was 0.4% (N=18). However, the prevalence of nonaccidental elbow fractures in those patients below 1 year of age was markedly higher at 30.3% (10/33). Among all elbow fractures in patients below 1 year of age, supracondylar humerus fractures were the most common fracture type (19/33, 57.6%), yet transphyseal fractures (6/33, 18.1%) were most commonly the result of NAT (5/6, 83.3%). In children over 1 year of age, fracture type was not an indicator of NAT. Conclusions: The vast majority of pediatric elbow fractures (99.6%) are accidental. However, certain factors, namely age below 1 year and transphyseal fractures increase the likelihood that these fractures may be a result of NAT. Level of Evidence: Level IV: retrospective case series.
Background/Purpose: Non-accidental trauma (NAT) remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality in childhood, with fractures serving as the second most common presenting sign of abuse. Conventionally, elbow fractures are more frequently associated with accidental trauma than NAT. We hypothesized that elbow fractures in non-early ambulatory children are at risk of a NAT mechanism.
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