Salter-Harris fractures
Background
- If physis fx missed > premature closure and bone growth arrest
- Most common after age 10
- Distal radius most common site
- Ligaments stronger than bones in kids - more likely to fx than sprain
- Repetitive stress injury can also cause it
- Suspect if point tenderness over physis and neg x-ray
Types
Type 1 (Slip)
- Fx through hypertrophic zone of physis (epiphysis separates from metaphysis)
- Growing cells remain on the epiphysis in continuity w/ blood supply
- Good prognosis
- Growing cells remain on the epiphysis in continuity w/ blood supply
- Occurs mostly in infants and todlers
- Suspect if point tenderness over a physis
- X-ray findings are subtle (epiphyseal displacement) or absent (clinical diagnosis)
Type 2 (Above)
- Fx through physis and out through piece of metaphyseal bone
- Most common type of fx
- Growing cells remain on the epiphysis in continuity w/ blood supply
- Good prognosis
- X-ray shows triangular fragment of metaphysis w/o injury to epiphysis
Type 3 (Below)
- Intra-articular fx
- Fx extends from epiphysis through physis
- X-ray shows epiphyseal fragment not a/w metaphyseal fracture
- Greater the displacement greater chance of vasc supply compromise
Type 4 (Both)
- Fx starts at articular surface and extends through epiphysis, physis, metaphysis
Type 5 (Crush)
- Physis compression fx
- Typically occurs at knee or ankle
- May confuse for Type 1 injury
- Highest chance of growth arrest
- X-ray findings may be minimal
- Suspect based on mechanism of injury, joint effusion
Mneumonic
S 1- Slipped (thru epiphysis) A 2- Above (epiphysis c metaphysis fx) L 3- Lower (thru epiphysis) T 4- Through (epi and meta) R 5- Rammed (growth plate crushed)
Treatment
- Types 1 2 - Splint, ortho f/u
- Types 3-4- Splint, ortho consult
- Type 5 - Casting, NWB, ortho consult / f/u
