The Effect of Obesity on Pediatric Tibia Fractures.

Q3 Medicine The Iowa orthopaedic journal Pub Date : 2022-06-01
Patrick Cole McGregor, Madeline M Lyons, Amy Wozniak, Kristina Linko, Felicity Fishman, Teresa Cappello
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Childhood obesity affects nearly one fifth of all children in the United States. Understanding the unique injury characteristics and treatment of tibia fractures in this population has become increasingly important. This study aims to explore the different injury characteristics between tibia fractures in obese and non-obese children.

Methods: 215 skeletally immature children aged 2-18 who sustained tibia fractures between 2007.2019 were retrospectively reviewed. Patients were analyzed by weight group: underweight, normal weight, overweight, and obese as defined by body mass index (BMI) percentile based upon age. Analyses were performed on dichotomized groups: underweight and normal weight versus overweight and obese. Chi-square or Fisher's exact test was used to compare differences in categorical outcome between the 2-category BMI class variables; Wilcoxon test was used to compare continuous outcomes. A multivariate logistic regression model was used to evaluate BMI associations while controlling for age, sex, race, and mechanism of injury.

Results: Distribution of BMI in the cohort included 6.5% underweight, 45.6% normal weight, 16.7% overweight and 31.2% obese. Overweight and obese children sustained fractures from low energy mechanisms at more than double the rate of normal and underweight children (20.5% versus 9.7%, p=0.028). Overweight and obese children sustained physeal fractures at a rate of 54.4% in comparison with 28.6% in their normal and underweight peers (p<0.0001, OR 2.50 (95% CI, 1.26-4.95)). Overweight and obese children sustained distal 1/3 tibia fractures at a higher rate of 56.9% compared to under and normal weight children at 33.9% (p=0.003, OR 2.24 (95% CI, 1.17-4.30)). Overweight and obese children underwent unplanned changes in treatment at a lower rate than normal and underweight children at 1% versus 8% rates of treatment change, respectively (p=0.013, OR 0.076 (95%CI, 0.009-0.655)). No significant differences were found in the rates of operative treatment, repeat reduction, post treatment complications, or physical therapy.

Conclusion: Overweight children sustain tibia fractures from low energy mechanisms at higher rates than their peers. Similarly, obese and overweight patients have higher rates of physeal injuries and higher rates of distal 1/3 tibia fractures. Complication rates are similar between obese and non-obese children undergoing treatment for tibia fractures. Level of Evidence: III.

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肥胖对儿童胫骨骨折的影响。
背景:儿童肥胖影响了美国近五分之一的儿童。了解这一人群胫骨骨折的独特损伤特征和治疗变得越来越重要。本研究旨在探讨肥胖与非肥胖儿童胫骨骨折的不同损伤特征。方法:回顾性分析2007年至2019年期间215例2-18岁骨骼发育不成熟的儿童胫骨骨折病例。患者按体重组进行分析:体重不足、正常体重、超重和肥胖(根据年龄的体重指数(BMI)百分位数定义)。对两组进行分析:体重不足和正常与超重和肥胖。使用卡方检验或Fisher精确检验来比较两类BMI类别变量之间分类结果的差异;采用Wilcoxon检验比较连续结果。在控制年龄、性别、种族和损伤机制的情况下,采用多变量logistic回归模型评估BMI的相关性。结果:队列中BMI的分布为:体重过轻6.5%,正常体重45.6%,超重16.7%,肥胖31.2%。超重和肥胖儿童发生低能量机制骨折的比例是正常和体重不足儿童的两倍多(20.5%比9.7%,p=0.028)。超重和肥胖儿童的骨骺骨折发生率为54.4%,而正常和体重不足儿童的骨骺骨折发生率为28.6%(结论:超重儿童低能量机制胫骨骨折发生率高于同龄儿童。同样,肥胖和超重的患者有更高的物理损伤率和更高的远端1/3胫骨骨折率。在接受胫骨骨折治疗的肥胖和非肥胖儿童中,并发症发生率相似。证据水平:III。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
The Iowa orthopaedic journal
The Iowa orthopaedic journal Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
47
期刊介绍: Any original article relevant to orthopaedic surgery, orthopaedic science or the teaching of either will be considered for publication in The Iowa Orthopaedic Journal. Articles will be enthusiastically received from alumni, visitors to the department, members of the Iowa Orthopaedic Society, residents, and friends of The University of Iowa Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation. The journal is published every June.
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