birth trauma bone injury : Fractures are most often observed following breech
delivery and/or shoulder dystopia in macrosomia infants. Clavicular fracture
: The clavicle is the most frequently fractured bone in the neonate during birth
and most often is an unpredictable unavoidable complication of normal birth.
Some correlation with birth weight, midforceps delivery, and shoulder dystocia
exists. The infant may present with pseudoparalysis. Examination may reveal
crepitus, palpable bony irregularity, and sternocleidomastoid muscle spasm.
Radiographic studies confirm the fracture. Healing usually occurs in 7-10 days.
Arm motion may be limited by pinning the infant's sleeve to the shirt. Assess
other associated injury to the spine, brachial plexus, or humerus.
Long
bone fracture : Loss of spontaneous arm or leg movement is an early sign of long
bone fracture, followed by swelling and pain on passive movement. The
obstetrician may feel or hear a snap of fracture at the time of delivery.
Radiographic studies of the limb confirm the diagnosis.
Femoral and
humeral shaft fractures are treated with splinting. Closed reduction and casting
is necessary only when displaced. Watch for evidence of radial nerve injury with
humeral fracture. Callus formation occurs, and complete recovery is expected in
2-4 weeks. In 8-10 days, the callus formation is sufficient to discontinue
immobilization. Orthopedic consultation is recommended. Radiographic studies
distinguish this condition from septic arthritis.
Epiphysial displacement
: Separation of humeral or femoral epiphysis occurs through the hypertrophied
layer of cartilage cells in the epiphysis. The diagnosis is made clinically
based on the finding of swelling around the shoulder, crepitus, and pain when
the shoulder is moved. Motion is painful, and the arm lies limp by the side.
Because the proximal humeral epiphysis is not ossified at birth, it is not
visible on radiography. Callus appears in 8-10 days and is visible on
radiography. Management consists of immobilizing the arm for 8-10 days. Fracture
of the distal epiphysis is more likely to have a significant residual deformity
than is fracture of the proximal humeral epiphysis.
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