The effect of proximal tibial fractures on the limb axis in children


Published online: Jun 27 2007

Sawas Nenopoulos, Aristides Vrettakos, Nikolaos Chaftikis, Theodoros Beslikas, Dimitrios Dadoukis

From the Aristotle's University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece

Abstract

Between 1985 and 2002 we treated 38 children with 39 fractures of the proximal tibia. Fractures affecting the proximal tibial physis were excluded from this study. Mean age at the time of injury was 7.1 years (range : 2.5 to 14). Conservative treatment was followed in 34 cases and four patients underwent surgery. We examined 31 children with 32 fractures followed up for an average of 4.8 years (range : 16 months to 15 years). Twenty eight (90.3%) patients developed post-traumatic tibia valga. Deformities were observed at an average 5.3 months after injury. All the cases with fractures of the medial cortex developed valgus angulation. The mean valgus angular deformity was 5.5°. There was also an average of 5.31 mm limb lengthening in 27 patients. Eleven patients with an angulation >5° were reevaluated at an average of 7.4 years from the initial injury. Partial remodelling was observed in 6 patients (54.5%) and total remodelling in 3 (25%). We recommend that children with proximal metaphyseal tibial fractures should be initially treated conservatively and followed up during skeletal development, because valgus deformity tends to remodel with age.