The Child With a Limp

Similar documents
A Patient s Guide to Limping in Children

The Limping Child: Differential Diagnosis

An understanding of the components of the normal gait cycle will aid in describing abnormalities of gait.

Assessment of limping child (beware the child who does not weight bear at all):

A free online interactive information resource for clinicians.

University of South Florida

THE HIP. Cooler than cool, the pinnacle of what is "it". Beyond all trends and conventional coolness.

7/1/2012. Repetitive valgus stresses cause microfractures in the apophyseal cartilage (weak link) Common in year olds

Orthopedics. 1. GOAL: Understand the pediatrician's role in preventing and screening for

The Limping Child. Todd Milbrandt, MD Division Chair Pediatric Orthopaedics Mayo Clinic Rochester

Limping in childhood

1. Discuss some common pediatric problems seen in the clinic. Diagnosis Clinical examination (at birth and subsequent well-baby examinations)

The Hip from Cradle to Grave. Haemish Crawford Ascot Hospital Starship Children s Hospital

Musculoskeletal Management of A Limping Child

A Patient s Guide to Transient Synovitis of the Hip in Children

The Child with a Limp

Non-inflammatory joint pain

Acute Osteomyelitis: similar to septic arthritis but up to 40% may be afebrile swelling overlying the bone & tenderness

Limping Kids. SJRHEM Rounds - Dr David Lewis

PEDIATRIC AND CONGENITAL IMAGING GUIDELINES MUSCULOSKELETAL 2009 MedSolutions, Inc

Acquired Hip Disorders in Children and Adolescents. Sarah D. Bixby Department of Radiology Boston Children s Hospital Boston, MA

PGALS: Approach to Child with Arthritis. Prof Chris Scott Paediatric Rheumatology

ORTHOPEDICS AND TRAUMATOLOGY TRAINING PROGRAM

I have no financial relationships related to disclose

Juvenile Osteochondroses

Topics and Cases in Pediatric Orthopaedics (Tuesday 6:30am 4 th Floor Orthopaedic Conference Room at Hamot)

Musculoskeletal Concerns in the Pediatric Athlete. John Hatzenbuehler, MD FACSM ACSM TPC Course 2015

Effects of Immobilization. N24 Pedi Musculoskeletal Spring 2012, Week 14. Cabrillo ADN/C. Madsen RN, MSN 1. Physical effects on other systems

Musculoskeletal Referral Guidelines

Friday Teaching. Bones

Joint involment in orthopedic diseases

What a Pain! Radiology Evaluation of Leg Complaints and Limping. I have nothing to disclose. Leg Complaints. Leg Complaints

1/10/2017 PEDIATRIC LIMP: BOARD REVIEW GOALS & OBJECTIVES RELEVANCE DAVID POHL, D.O. PGY-3 ST. JOHN MACOMB-OAKLAND JANUARY 21, 2017

- within 16 weeks. Semi-urgent - within 8 weeks

Evaluation of the Hip and Knee

Andrea Marmor, MD Associate Clinical Professor, Pediatrics UCSF San Francisco General Hospital

CLINICS IN SPORTS MEDICINE

& & 392 & C1-C2

Peggers Super Summaries: Paediatric Hip

PAIN SYNDROMES

6/23/2017. What do you see? skull fracture

Pediatric Orthopedic Pathology Pathology 2 Dr. Gary Mumaugh

Will She Still Make the WNBA? Sports Injuries & Fractures

A 4 year old with hip pain: Legg-Calvé-Perthes Disease

OMISSION BE CHILLY in PÆDIATRIC ORTHOPÆDICS

Evaluation of Pediatric Foot Pain

MRI of Pediatric Ankle and Foot. Mahesh Thapa, MD Associate Professor Seattle Children s University of Washington School of Medicine

PAEDIATRIC ORTHOPAEDICS BRENT WEATHERHEAD, MD, FRCSC PAEDIATRIC ORTHOPAEDIC SURGEON MEDICAL DIRECTOR, REBALANCE

Orthopedic Emergencies. Peter Gutierrez, MD Pediatric Emergency Medicine Children s Healthcare of Atlanta

Joint Trust Guidelines for the Limping Child with No History of Trauma

TUBERCULOSIS OF HIP AND KNEE JOINT

AAP Boot Camp KNEE AND ANKLE EXAM

Case Presentations The Child with a Limp

DEPARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS WALTER REED NATIONAL MILITARY MEDICAL CENTER NATIONAL CAPITAL CONSORTIUM PEDIATRIC RESIDENCY PROGRAM.

Foot and Ankle Complaints.

Contents. copyrighted material by PRO-ED, Inc. Chapter 1. Chapter 2. Chapter 3. Chapter 4. Chapter 5. Conditions in Athletic Injuries

Guideline Number: NIA_CG_057-4 Last Revised Date: August 2014 Responsible Department: Implementation Date: August 2014 Clinical Operations

Current Thinking of the Osteochondroses. Diego Jaramillo, M.D., M.P.H. Department of Radiology Stanford Children s Hospital

Pediatric Orthopedics: ``To Refer or Not to Refer``

Pediatric Rounds Topics and Objectives

4/28/2010. Fractures. Normal Bone and Normal Ossification Bone Terms. Epiphysis Epiphyseal Plate (physis) Metaphysis

Case 1 7 yo male Right elbow injury 3 months ago Medial elbow pain and tenderness over medial epicondyle Long arm cast given but off himself 1 month a

Bone and Joint Infections Oh, My

PEDIATRIC AND CONGENITAL IMAGING GUIDELINES: MUSCULOSKELETAL 2011 MedSolutions, Inc

Hip Impingement and Arthritis: Preservation vs. Total Hip Arthroplasty. Faculty Disclosures. Objectives 11/17/2017

Index. Note: Page numbers of article titles are in boldface type.

Pediatric Orthopaedic Fellowship Curriculum

Running Injuries in Children and Adolescents

Index. Note: Page numbers of article titles are in boldface type.

SMF PCP Treatment & Referral Guideline Orthopedics Developed February 1, 2003 Revised: October, 2011

Other Congenital and Developmental Diseases of the Foot. Department of Orthopedic Surgery St. Vincent s s Hospital, The Catholic University

APPROACH TO THE DIAGNOSIS OF GROIN PAIN. Alexandra Myers, D.O., M.S.H.S. February 22, 2018 OPSC Annual Convention

PEDIATRIC MUSCULOSKELETAL IMAGING GUIDELINES Version 17.0; Effective

LECTURE 8: DEVELOPMENTAL ORTHOPAEDICS. Paediatric MS History o Reason for referral o Past history

3/18/18. Adolescent Hip Injuries. Adolescents with Hip Injuries DISCLOSURES

Orthopaedic Hip (and Thigh) Referral Guidelines

Lower Extremity Pediatric Trauma

Exam of the Knee and Ankle I HAVE NO FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES RELEVANT TO THIS PRESENTATION

Sport Specific MRI. The symptoms of the majority, if not all sports injuries are experienced when upright, and weight-bearing

Stress Injuries in the Young Athlete 3 rd Annual Young Athlete Conference Greg Canty, MD Medical Director, Center for Sports Medicine Asst Professor

1. Review specialty services and programs available through Shriners Hospitals for Children

Anterior Knee Pain in Children. Joseph Chorley, MD Associate Professor, Pediatrics Baylor College of Medicine

Common Apophyseal Problems in the Athlete

WEEKLY CLINICAL SCHEDULES. Martin Boyer (hand surgery) Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday AM PM AM PM AM PM AM PM AM PM VA OR Wohl

Bilateral hip pain with right proximal femoral lesion

Family physicians are increasingly likely to see children

REFERRAL GUIDELINES: ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY

ASSESSMENT AND MANAGEMENT OF THE KNEE AND LOWER LIMB.

Priorities Forum Statement GUIDANCE

PEM GUIDE CHILDHOOD FRACTURES

Hip Biomechanics and Osteotomies

FUNCTIONAL ANATOMY AND EXAM OF THE HIP, GROIN AND THIGH

MORE FOR FEET PROGRAM. User guide for podiatrists and podiatry code list (ICD-10-AM codes)

Acute Ankle Injuries, Part 1: Office Evaluation and Management

Evaluation of Gait Mechanics Using Computerized Plantar Surface Pressure Analysis and it s Relation to Common Musculoskeletal Problems

Childhood hip conditions. Belen Carsi Paediatric Orthopaedic Consultant

Dr. K. Brindha, M.D PG ESI PGIMSR, K.K Nagar, Chennai

Pediatric Athletic Overuse Injuries. Susan Haralabatos, MD OPSC Annual Meeting 2018

PEDIATRICS 300A CORE TOPICS LIST

Pediatric Case Studies. Case 1

Transcription:

KID WITH A LIMP

Common in ED, common in Exams Differential diagnosis is very wide Most causes benign, but mustn't miss Septic arthritis Osteomyelitis Fractures / NAI SUFE (older, heavier children) The Child With a Limp Key is history and examination -Age of the child -Is the limp acute or chronic? -Is there fever or a history of fever? -Is there a history of trauma? -Examine the abdomen and lower limbs right to the toes Acute causes (all ages) - Contusion, Foot foreign body, fracture, osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, poor shoe fit, reactive arthritis, transient synovitis Chronic causes- Rheumatoid disease Preschool (1-5 years) Acute NAI Hand-foot-mouth disease Haemarthrosis (haemophillia) Henoch-schonlein purpura Fracture (Salter Harris I, Toddler's fracture) Septic Hip Chronic Cerebral palsy Dysplastic hip Discitis Leg length discrepancy Vertical Talus School age (5-12) Acute Fracture Myositis Chronic Perthe's disease Baker cyst Kohler disease Leukaemia Tethered cord Tarsal coalition

Adolescent (13-19) Acute Injury Tendonitis Chronic Chondromalacia of patella Gonococcal arthritis Herniated disc Overuse syndromes Scoliosis Slipped capital epiphysis Tethered cord Tumour Investigations WCC- Not particularly sensitive or specific CRP- Temperature of 38.5 or greater and elevated CRP 100% sensitive for septic arthritis, 87% specific in children with arthritis ESR- Reasonably sensitive, CRP probably better Blood Cultures Ultrasound -useful for finding an effusion and guiding aspiration Joint aspiration Radiology Plain Xrays- Indicated in most children with a limp Stress fractures, Perthe's disease, SCFE, Osteomyelitis, congenital abnormalities, bone tumours MRI- Avascular necrosis Nuclear medicine scans- Osteomyelitis, Perthe's disease Approach -Careful history and examination- abdomen to feet, examine gait -Xray area of concern -If febrile or history of fever, Investigate for septic arthritis -Bloods- if raised CRP or WCC --> Ultrasound and aspirate - If history of trauma, consider NAI

2. APPROACHES..

What s the BAD Stuff? Tumour Brain Bone Ewings Tumour Osteogenic Sarcoma Severe Infection Septic Arthritis Osteomyelitis Discitis Appendicitis Joint problem SCFE Referred pain Child Abuse

What if you miss a fracture, or something else?? EARLY FOLLOW-UP IS THE KEY

The Limping Child DIFFERENT APPROACHES

Think in terms of Age Groups In all ages - Trauma, infection(septic arthritis, OM), tumour, serum sickness 1-3 yo 4-10 yo 11-15 yo Transient synovitis NAI Hip dysplasia Juvenile arthritis Neuromuscular disease Haemophilia Henoch-Schonlein purpura Transient synovitis Juvenile arthritis Perthe s disease Leg length Rheumatic fever Haemophilia Henoch-Shonlein purpura Slipped femoral epiphysis osteochondritis dessicans Gauchers disease Regional pain syndrome Dunn

Think in terms of Painful vs Painless PAINFULL Septic Arthritis Synovitis Malignancy Osteochondritis Trauma Referred pain NAI PAINLESS Things they re born with Hip dysplasias Unequal leg lengths Perthes Neuromuscular disorder

HERE S MY APPROACH

Where does it hurt? If they localise and it makes sense Is it? Traumatic Inflammatory Neoplastic Vascular Is it INFLAMMATION, FRACTURE/ DISLOCATION, NECROSIS, SEPTIC ARTHRITIS or a TUMOUR

When it doesn t make sense Is it central? Is it referred pain ie appendicitis? Is it coming from the back ie discitis?

There are so many things it can be Avascular necrosis hip, navicular, metatarsal head Apophysitis inflammation of the apophysis where tendons insert» calcaneal, tibial tuberosity Tendonitis infrapatella Discitis Growing pains

Is it in the back? Exclude Discitis! Pain in back! Radiation down legs! May develop abscess! Require antibiotics!

Is it localised to the foot? Avascular Necrosis NAVICULAR (Kohler s Disease) May be bilateral males 4-7 yo METATARSAL HEAD (Freiberg s Disease) usually 2nd metatarsal head

Is the pain in the hip? SCFE Legg Calves Perthes (avascular necrosis) Septic Arthritis

Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis! Ipsilateral many cases are bilateral! Older, heavier children! widening and irregular growth plate! pain on weight bearing, rotation, abduction, flexion!

Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis! Klein s Line! If Xray normal, investigate further! bone scan! MRI!

Klein Line

Avascular Necrosis Idiopathic - Legg Calve Perthes 3-12 yo sepsis/trauma Limited movement

Avascular Necrosis

Septic Hip! Hip Flexed, externally rotated! Minimal movement! Inflammatory markers up! Xray may be normal, need ultrasound!

OK, so the pain is coming from the hip and its not SCFE or Avascular Necrosis SEPTIC HIP VS SYNOVITIS HOW TO TELL THEM APART

Septic arthritis vs synovitis Children with septic arthritis Higher fever Look sicker Severe pain CPR and ESR >20 Children with transient synovitis Children aren t as sick Post viral, trauma or allergic reaction

Who to ultrasound? My approach- Well child Child is well and Short Hx of the disease Treat with anti-inflammatories and watch. If doesn t get better then Ultrasound Ultrasound: >95% sensitive for fluid in the joint In the low risk patient, use it like a D-dimer if it s negative, the patient can go home. if it s positive, tap the joint.

Who to ultrasound? My approach- Unwell child If you think the child has a high chance of a septic hip, then ultrasound. If the ultrasound is positive- tap it. If negative, consider admission for 12 hours then re-scan.

ALWAYS CONSIDER NAI

KID WITH A LIMP