Background: Because fractures of the capitellum are rare in childhood and the young adolescent period, their treatment is still debatable and there appears to be no established treatment protocol. In the present study, we evaluated the results obtained in adolescents with type 1 capitellar fractures who were treated with open reduction and internal fixation with a 3.5 mm lag screw, directed from posterior to anterior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 16-month-old male with previously untreated bilateral clubfeet was admitted to S.B. Izmir Tepecik Education and Research Hospital, Izmir, Turkey.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To evaluate the role of the risk factors in the diagnosis of developmental hip dysplasia (DDH) by ultrasonographic screening.
Methods: The hips of 327 newborns (151 females, 176 males) with identifiable risk factors including family history (n=20), congenital muscular torticollis (n=19), oligohydramniosis (n=2), breech presentation (n=51), multiple gestation (n=6), pes calcaneovalgus (n=74), clubfoot (n=152), and postural metatarsus adductus (n=3) were examined clinically on the first day of life and by ultrasonography within two weeks after birth. The hips were evaluated according to the Graf method.