AI Article Synopsis

  • Most kids with broken collarbones can heal without surgery, but doctors needed to know how long it usually takes for them to heal.
  • The study looked at 390 kids with collarbone fractures and found out how healing time varies by age: infants heal in about 4 weeks, school-aged kids in about 8 weeks, and teenagers in about 12 weeks.
  • The results help doctors know when to check for healing, so they can ensure kids are recovering on track.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Conservative management of most pediatric clavicle fractures is standard. Despite a predictable nonoperative course, evidence about the timeliness of healing is lacking. The goal of this study was to identify when radiographic signs of healing should be expected during routine conservative management of closed pediatric diaphyseal clavicle fractures.

Methods: Patients 18 years or younger with an acute diaphyseal clavicle fracture treated at a large academic multispecialty orthopaedic practice over 5 years were retrospectively reviewed. Patients who completed nonoperative management until radiographic and clinical evidence of union were included and categorized into 3 age groups: infants and toddlers (0 to 2 y old), school-aged children (3 to 9 y old), and adolescents (10 to 18 y old). Radiographic healing was analyzed within each 2- to 4-week interval.

Results: Among 390 patients, 303 met inclusion criteria. Overall shortening and displacement averaged 0.3±0.6 centimeters and 42.6%±43.0%, respectively. Follow-up averaged 50±24 days with an orthopaedic physician and 16.3±14.8 months for a well-child check. No clinically relevant or statistically significant improvements in the number of cortices bridged were observed in infants/toddlers after 4 weeks (average 20.4±4.3 d from injury), in school-aged children after 8 weeks (average 39.7±7.9 d from injury), or in adolescents after 12 weeks (average 66.4±8.1 d from injury).

Conclusions: This study provides an age-dependent timeline during which adequate radiographic healing should be expected in nonoperatively managed pediatric diaphyseal clavicle fractures. Radiographic protocols can be purposefully timed to visualize sufficient healing in infants and toddlers by 4 weeks, school-aged children by 8 weeks, and adolescents by 12 weeks.

Level Of Evidence: Level III.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/BPO.0000000000002815DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

diaphyseal clavicle
16
pediatric diaphyseal
12
clavicle fractures
12
school-aged children
12
weeks average
12
conservative management
8
healing expected
8
infants toddlers
8
radiographic healing
8
children weeks
8

Similar Publications

Background: Pediatric clavicle fractures are often managed by physicians with and without pediatric subspecialty training. The aim of this study is to identify if variability of practice exists between pediatric orthopaedic surgeons versus nonpediatric orthopaedic specialists during management of pediatric diaphyseal clavicle fractures.

Methods: Patients ≤18 years of age with an acute, closed diaphyseal clavicle fracture treated between January 2018 and July 2023 by a large hospital-employed multispecialty orthopaedic practice (in a regional and academic health network) were retrospectively reviewed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Most kids with broken collarbones can heal without surgery, but doctors needed to know how long it usually takes for them to heal.
  • The study looked at 390 kids with collarbone fractures and found out how healing time varies by age: infants heal in about 4 weeks, school-aged kids in about 8 weeks, and teenagers in about 12 weeks.
  • The results help doctors know when to check for healing, so they can ensure kids are recovering on track.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: To compare the clinical, radiographic, and patient-reported outcomes of nonoperative and operative treatment of adolescents with comminuted "Z-type" midshaft clavicle fractures.

Design: Prospective observational cohort.

Setting: Eight tertiary care pediatric centers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Clavicle fractures represent 2.5-4% of all fractures observed in emergency services. 80% occurs in the middle third.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!