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Most Common Pediatric Fractures and How to Prevent Them by Dr. Jill Larson

Video Published 2025-08-26 Updated 2025-10-04

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Topic Overview

Comprehensive overview of common pediatric fractures, focusing on distal radius and ankle injuries. Covers fracture classification, growth plate considerations, treatment approaches from splinting to surgical reduction, and monitoring for physeal arrest in children.

Key Takeaways

  • Distal radius fractures are most common in pediatrics; peak season is March-August with an October spike from school activities.
  • Non-displaced buckle fractures heal reliably in 3-4 weeks with removable splints, often without orthopedic follow-up needed.
  • Physeal fractures require cautious reduction to avoid growth plate arrest; monitor with 6-month follow-up x-rays for Harris lines.
  • Displaced fractures in children >10 years need close monitoring as remodeling potential is limited and re-displacement can occur.
  • Pediatric ankle fractures commonly involve distal fibular physis; treat non-weight bearing with boot/cast to prevent physeal injury.

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