Pediatric Fractures—Volume II
Materialtyp:
ArtikelUtgivningsinformation: Basel MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2024Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (168 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783725823239
- 9783725823246
- Medicine
- Surgery
- Romania
- alignment
- anatomic distal tibia locking plate
- ankle
- arthroscopy
- autologous vascularized bone graft
- biomechanics
- bone cyst
- calcaneonavicular coalitions
- children
- clinical patterns
- congenital pseudoarthrosis of tibia
- corrective osteotomy
- diagnosis
- elbow dislocation
- foot
- forearm
- fracture
- free-fibular bone graft
- growth correction
- growth plate
- humerus
- isolated skull fracture in children
- lateral humeral condyle
- limb length discrepancy
- malunion
- medial epicondyle fracture
- nerve injury
- neurofibromatosis
- osteosyntheses in children
- paediatric
- paediatric fracture
- paediatric orthopaedics
- palsies
- palsy
- pediatric
- pediatric elbow injury
- pediatric facial fractures
- pediatric traumatic brain injury
- pin configuration
- radiation dose
- radius
- stress fracture
- supracondylar
- supracondylar humeral fracture
- surgery
- talocalcaneal coalition
- tarsal coalition
- three-dimensional
- tibial nonunion
- tibial spine avulsion
- timing
- transphyseal screws
- treatment
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Despite the high incidence of pediatric injuries, there is still much debate regarding optimal treatment regimes. Although non-operative and surgical treatment techniques have been extensively developed during the past several decades, current management is still more eminence-based rather than evidence-based because of limited scientific evidence. For example, the recently developed comprehensive Dutch clinical practice guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of the most common pediatric fractures included almost solely "low"- or "very low"-level recommendations based on the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) criteria. The only exceptions were some forearm fracture recommendations, which received "moderate" GRADEs. There is a clear lack of data and a need for higher-level science in pediatric trauma. Considering the success and popularity of the previous Special Issue, entitled "Pediatric Fractures" published in the journal Children, we have published a second Special Issue where we aimed to gather original research papers and review articles related to pediatric fractures, including the diagnosis, treatment, or follow-up of common fractures. This is a reprint of the second Special Issue on "Pediatric Fractures" and contains all 13 articles.
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eng
Freely available e-book