Pattern Of Long Bone Fractures In A Paediatric Population At Kenyatta National Hospital 2017
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Date
2017Author
Mwangi, Eric Ng’ang’a
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background
Paediatric injuries, both accidental and non-accidental are a global public health problem. In
developed countries injuries account for majority of the mortality in the paediatric age group
after 1 year of age. Musculoskeletal trauma is the most common form of injury in childhood.
Locally, there is a paucity of data on the distribution, cause and severity of childhood fractures.
Objective
This study aimed to determine the pattern long bone fractures, common mechanisms of
injury, severity and location at time of injury in the paediatric age group.
Study design and setting
This was a cross-sectional study conducted at the Accident and Emergency department,
Paediatric Orthopaedic ward and Fracture Clinics in Kenyatta National Hospital.
Study methodology
The study had 104 participants. All paediatric patients presenting with long bone fractures
between October 2016 and December 2016 were registered, listed and assigned consecutive
numbers. Sampling was done for those who met the inclusion criteria and they were recruited
into the study.
Data obtained has been stratified and analysed based on age of patient, anatomic site of fracture,
fracture classification based on the AO PCCF classification system, mechanism of injury and
location at the time of injury. Chi- square test was used to analyse categorical variables. The
data was summarized in terms of means, medians and modes and categorical data was
presented in form of tables, charts and graphs.
Results
One hundred and four participants who had sustained 119 fractures were recruited. Males were
61(59%) and females 43(41%) in number with a median age of 6years and 5 months (2 –
14years). Majority had single (84%) and closed (96%) fractures. Majority of the fractures were
due to falls (56%) and commonly occurred at home or its surroundings (56%). Upper limb
fractures predominated at 53% with majority involving the distal metaphysis of the humerus
(70%).
2
Conclusion
Majority of the long bone fractures in children in our setting occur due to falls in the home or
its surroundings and the distal metaphysis of the humerus is the most commonly fractured
region. The fractures showed a bimodal type of distribution with peaks at 4 ~ 6 years and at 12
~ 14 years of age. Fractures secondary to RTAs were higher than in other studies.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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