How to screen a paediatric elbow X-ray for injuries

Elbow injuries are common in the paediatric population. Diagnosing these injuries relies on X-rays taken on initial presentation in the emergency department. Interpreting these radiographs can occasionally be challenging, partly because of the sequential appearance of secondary ossification centres...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brian Madison, Patrick Tshizubu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: South Sudan Doctors' Association 2021-02-01
Series:South Sudan Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bit.ly/2TiEIDh
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spelling doaj-f7bdb9cd4a3d41778f11f29a3259798e2021-06-11T04:16:02ZengSouth Sudan Doctors' AssociationSouth Sudan Medical Journal 2309-46052309-46132021-02-01141810How to screen a paediatric elbow X-ray for injuriesBrian Madison0Patrick Tshizubu 1Department of Orthopaedics and Trauma, Juba Teaching Hospital, South SudanCentre Hospitalier Universitaire de Kigali (CHUK)/ University Teaching Hospital of Kigali, Rwanda Elbow injuries are common in the paediatric population. Diagnosing these injuries relies on X-rays taken on initial presentation in the emergency department. Interpreting these radiographs can occasionally be challenging, partly because of the sequential appearance of secondary ossification centres in the paediatric elbow. We propose a methodical approach that would help a clinician identify these injuries, especially the radiographically subtle ones. Evaluating these X-rays should start with a lateral view which identifies the majority of elbow injuries. Anterior cortical disruption, fat pad sign, and the anterior humeral line can be evaluated on this view, and if present, alerts the clinician to a possible subtle fracture. On this view also, the clinician can evaluate the radio-capitellar line and then proceed to evaluate it again on the anteroposterior view. With this approach almost all fractures and dislocations around the elbow can be identified. https://bit.ly/2TiEIDhhumeral supracondylar fractureselbowanterior cortical disruptionanterior humeral linefat padradio-capitellar line
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brian Madison
Patrick Tshizubu
spellingShingle Brian Madison
Patrick Tshizubu
How to screen a paediatric elbow X-ray for injuries
South Sudan Medical Journal
humeral supracondylar fractures
elbow
anterior cortical disruption
anterior humeral line
fat pad
radio-capitellar line
author_facet Brian Madison
Patrick Tshizubu
author_sort Brian Madison
title How to screen a paediatric elbow X-ray for injuries
title_short How to screen a paediatric elbow X-ray for injuries
title_full How to screen a paediatric elbow X-ray for injuries
title_fullStr How to screen a paediatric elbow X-ray for injuries
title_full_unstemmed How to screen a paediatric elbow X-ray for injuries
title_sort how to screen a paediatric elbow x-ray for injuries
publisher South Sudan Doctors' Association
series South Sudan Medical Journal
issn 2309-4605
2309-4613
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Elbow injuries are common in the paediatric population. Diagnosing these injuries relies on X-rays taken on initial presentation in the emergency department. Interpreting these radiographs can occasionally be challenging, partly because of the sequential appearance of secondary ossification centres in the paediatric elbow. We propose a methodical approach that would help a clinician identify these injuries, especially the radiographically subtle ones. Evaluating these X-rays should start with a lateral view which identifies the majority of elbow injuries. Anterior cortical disruption, fat pad sign, and the anterior humeral line can be evaluated on this view, and if present, alerts the clinician to a possible subtle fracture. On this view also, the clinician can evaluate the radio-capitellar line and then proceed to evaluate it again on the anteroposterior view. With this approach almost all fractures and dislocations around the elbow can be identified.
topic humeral supracondylar fractures
elbow
anterior cortical disruption
anterior humeral line
fat pad
radio-capitellar line
url https://bit.ly/2TiEIDh
work_keys_str_mv AT brianmadison howtoscreenapaediatricelbowxrayforinjuries
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