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M O Mathew Department of Orthopaedics, Royal Hospital for Sick
Children, Glasgow G3 8SJ
Correspondence to: Mr Bennet
Few data are published on the bruising seen in association
with paediatric fractures. What little can be found is set in the context of non-accidental injury. Differing opinions about the importance of bruising have been expressed by those working on medicolegal cases.1-3 The force necessary to fracture a
normal bone is thought to result invariably in external evidence of
trauma.1 The absence of such bruising has been taken to
imply that minimal force was required to produce the fracture We prospectively assessed 93 acute fractures in 88 normal
children (49 boys and 39 girls; age range 12 months to 13 years 11 months) at presentation and before definitive treatment, looking for
evidence of bruising around the fracture site. The prevalence of
bruising at initial presentation and its incidence during early follow
up was evaluated in subsets of fractures grouped according to
displacement and extent of soft tissue cover. All the children were
seen within 24 hours of injury.
There were 17 undisplaced, 46 displaced, and 30 angulated (>15°)
fractures. Simple falls accounted for 70 fractures (15 undisplaced, 25 angulated, 30 displaced); 23 fractures were the result of falls from
heights (2 undisplaced, 5 angulated, 16 displaced). Bruising was seen
at initial presentation in 8 fractures (9%), which were either
displaced or superficially located, or both. Bruising was not present
at initial presentation in undisplaced fractures or those well covered
by soft tissues.
Seventy three fractures were examined at the time of primary treatment
under anaesthesia in the first 24 hours after admission to hospital.
This group included the 8 fractures with bruising evident at initial
presentation. Thirteen other fractures in this group (without evidence
of bruising at initial presentation) had developed overt bruising by
the time of definitive treatment within 24 hours of hospital admission.
Sixteen fractures were reviewed later in the first week for various
reasons (for example, change of plaster casts, remanipulations); 4 of
these had developed local bruising. Four fractures were reviewed at
three weeks when a plaster cast was removed. They were all undisplaced
distal radial fractures that had not required manipulative treatment,
and bruising was not evident in any of them. Thus 25 fractures (28%)
developed bruising during the first week after trauma.
The absence of bruising in children with fractures has been cited
as supporting evidence that the force required to fracture the bone was
minimal, which implies weakness of the underlying bone Local bruising in acute fractures in childhood is perhaps less common
than might be expected. When present it implies that any underlying
fracture is likely to be displaced. Its absence is an unreliable sign
on which to base a diagnosis of non-accidental injury.
Contributors: GCB had the original idea for this work, checked
the analysis of data, and edited the article. NR and MOM jointly
collected and analysed data. MOM wrote the article. GCB is guarantor
for the study.
Funding: No external funding.
Conflict of interest: None.
(Accepted 5 May 1998)
that is,
the fracture occurred because of metabolic bone disease or osteogenesis
imperfecta.
2 3
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perhaps due to
a temporary abnormality such as copper deficiency or subtle forms of
osteogenesis imperfecta.
1 3
In our study of normal
children most fractures (91%) were not associated with bruising at the
time of presentation. Most (72%) remained without evident bruising in
the first week after injury. We therefore suggest that the absence of
bruising cannot be taken to imply either underlying bone disease or an
increased possibility of non-accidental injury.
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© BMJ 1998
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