The Orthopaedic Management of Brain-Injured Children

Abstract
This survey emphasizes the important role the orthopaedic surgeon plays in the treatment of brain-damaged children. In one institution in ten years, 122 brain-damaged children were admitted and 112 were evaluated: 21 per cent walked in the first year after injury, and 83 per cent walked at the time of final evaluation; 68 per cent of the patients had joint deformities on admission, and 8 per cent had joint deformities at discharge. Scoliosis occurred in four patients, limb-length inequalities in three, and ectopic ossification in six. The problems of management of a total of sixty-nine fractures were described. Internal fixation was necessary in two of the fractured femora and would have been advisable in a third.

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