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A 13 year old boy with complaints of “butt pain” Morning Report July 1, 2009.

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Presentation on theme: "A 13 year old boy with complaints of “butt pain” Morning Report July 1, 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 A 13 year old boy with complaints of “butt pain” Morning Report July 1, 2009

2  Otherwise healthy  Noted the pain after attending a school dance……but “he did not dance”  Afebrile  What do you want to know????

3 His exam is “normal” except for tenderness over the right gluteus muscle He is sent home with NSAID’s and a diagnosis of musculoskeletal strain

4 Don’t forget…….Give “what if” instructions….

5 It is now 5 days later……  Now complaining of right knee pain and he is limping  No fever noted at home, Temp is 99 in the office  Now what????????

6 Films are ordered….given Tylenol #3  Plain films of the hips and knees are “normal”….

7 Everyone in thinking SCFE

8 Anatomy

9 SCFE

10 SCFE  Usually in boys at puberty  Usually unilateral  Stable or unstable  Diagnostic radiograph: frog leg hip films  Surgical intervention

11 SCFE Severity

12 But he does not have a SCFE…….. What do you do now? What else is in your differential of a limping child?

13 Differential  Toddler  Septic arthritis  Discitis  Sepsis  Osteomyelitis  Pyomyositis  Neoplasia  Leukemia, bone tumors…  JIA?  Transient synovitis  Child (3-10 years)  Septic Arthritis  Osteomyelitis  Pyomyositis  Neoplasia  Leukemia, bone tumors…  Discitis  JIA?  Perthes  Synovitis  Adolescent…add  SCFE

14 If you send him home… again, the “what if” instructions are KEY….

15 The plot thickens…….  4 days later, the child returns for more tylenol #3  Still limping  Increasing pain with extension of the hip and internal rotation of the leg but there is no redness, warmth or swelling  Now fever to 102, HR is 130, RR 24, BP 90/50

16 Systemic symptoms  His left elbow is red and swollen  Disoriented  Jaundiced (Bili 12/8, SGOT and SGPT nl)  Febrile  Anemic (hgb 6, WBC 24)

17 DIFFERENTIAL???? The patient is hospitalized ………..and a diagnostic procedure is performed

18 The CT Normal Not normal

19 The Psoas (part of the posterior abdominal wall)

20 Psoas Abscess  Hip symptoms  Can be a “primary diagnosis”  Can be associated with GI pathology or sometimes with GU pathology  Not usually associated with hip infection

21 In the hospital…….  Psoas abscess and elbow drained  Antibiotics begun  All cultures positive for St A…blood and abscess and elbow  Remains febrile on POD 1  Remains febrile on POD 2  Remains febrile on POD 3 but continues to “feel better”, jaundice resolves Want to do anything else, antibiotics are given and appropriate???????????

22 In the hospital…….  Remains febrile on POD 4  Remains febrile on POD 5  Remains febrile on POD 6 “feels better” but febrile……. Now what????? “feels better” but febrile……. Now what?????

23 Another diagnostic procedure was performed……..

24 Repeat CT reveals concern for hip disease…the acetabulum appears “moth-eaten” And the child returns to the OR for I and D of the hip joint……. After which he is afebrile…

25 Septic Arthritis of the Hip A True Emergency

26 Septic Arthritis of the Hip  Usually in children under 3 years  Usually unilateral  Fever, high WBC, high sed rate  Diagnostic radiographs: ultrasound, CT/MRI  Plain films are normal in 50% of cases!!!!!

27 When the Xray is diagnostic: there is a loss of the architecture of the pelvis and widening of the joint space

28 The MRI

29 Septic Arthritis Risk Factors for Poor Outcome  Over 5 days to surgical drainage  Associated osteomyelitis in the proximal femur

30 Morals of the story: Sometimes you just have to keep looking…..  Fever  Severe pain  Night pain  Functional impairment  Escalating symptoms A limping child =

31 Peds in Review  http://pedsinreview.aappublications. org/cgi/reprint/27/5/170 http://pedsinreview.aappublications. org/cgi/reprint/27/5/170 http://pedsinreview.aappublications. org/cgi/reprint/27/5/170 Approach to Acute Limb Pain in Childhood Shirley M. L. Tse, MD Ronald M. Laxer, MD The Hospital for Sick Children; University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Shirley M. L. Tse, MD Ronald M. Laxer, MD The Hospital for Sick Children; University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada


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