BEST EVIDENCE TOPIC REPORT |
Institution Manchester Royal Infirmary
Report by Rob Williams, Specialist Registrar
Checked
by N Hardcastle, Senior House Officer
Institution
Manchester Royal Infirmary
Abstract
A short cut review was carried out
to establish whether tibial fractures in very young children are
associated with child abuse. 44 papers were found using the reported
searches, of which three presented the best evidence to answer the
clinical question. The author, date and country of publication,
patient group studied, study type, relevant outcomes, results and
study weaknesses of these best papers are tabulated. It is concluded
that very young children with tibial fractures should be closely
assessed for non-accidental injury.
Clinical
scenario
An 18 month old child attends the emergency
department with a limp. You question the mother of the child who
explains that the child has fallen down three stairs at home. X-ray
reveals a transverse tibial fracture. Further inquiry is
unrewarding, and you wonder whether the presence of the fracture
alone is sufficient to support a diagnosis of non-accidental
injury.
Three-part
question
In [very young children who present with tibial
fractures] what are [the relative chances of accidental and
non-accidental injury]?
Search
strategy
EMBASE<1980 to 2006 Week 12 Ovid
MEDLINE(R)<1966 to March Week 3 2006 (exp battered child syndrome
OR battered child syndrome.mp OR child abuse OR non-accidental
injury.mp OR non-accidental trauma.mp) AND (exp tibial fractures OR
transverse tibial fracture$.mp OR spiral tibial fracture$.mp) LIMIT
to human AND English. The Cochrane Library 2006, Issue 1 [Child abuse
[MeSH]] AND [tibial fractures [MeSH]] ? 0 results.
Search
outcome
Altogether 44 papers were found, of which three were
of some relevance to the question. These are shown in table 4
.
CLINICAL BOTTOM
LINE
Very young children with tibial fractures should be
closely assessed for non-accidental injury
References