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Pediatric Limb Deficiency

Pediatric Limb Deficiency. Ramona M.Okumura, C.P./L.P. Clinical Prosthetist Senior Lecturer, Division of Prosthetics Orthotics Department of Rehabilitation Medicine School of Medicine University of Washington. Introduction. small number born with or acquiring a limb deficiency

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Pediatric Limb Deficiency

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  1. Pediatric Limb Deficiency Ramona M.Okumura, C.P./L.P. Clinical Prosthetist Senior Lecturer, Division of Prosthetics Orthotics Department of Rehabilitation Medicine School of Medicine University of Washington

  2. Introduction • small number born with or acquiring a limb deficiency • vast majority have no known etiology • child’s changing developmental capabilities continuously alter the team treatment plan • must keep the doors open for long-term goals and yet provide for optimal functioning • successful outcome depends on treatment of the whole family • very pleasant clients which usually do very well in a healthy family unit

  3. Objectives • Be able to classify Limb Deficiencies • Identify particular management issues • Know how often to review the prescription as the child grows • Predict a functional outcome

  4. Epidemiology • Incidence estimated at 4 per 10,000 births • Congenital 60% to Acquired 40% • Male : Female • Congenital 1.2:1 • Acquired 3:2 • Left : Right • 2:1 in unilateral UE Transverse Deficiency

  5. EpidemiologyCommon presentations Unilateral transverse deficiency of the forearm middle third

  6. EpidemiologyCommon presentations Unilateral conversion by ankle disarticulation for longitudinal fibular deficiency

  7. Embryology • Limbs form 4-7 weeks gestation • Proximal to distal in sequence • Upper limb develops slightly ahead of the lower limb • Simultaneously with organ development • Associated with Radial deficiency

  8. Etiology ofCongenital Deficiencies • Environmental • Genetic

  9. Environmental Etiology • precise origin unknown in the majority of cases

  10. Environmental Etiology • precise origin unknown • Speculate Vascular causes particularly some kind of Thromboembolism

  11. Environmental Etiology • precise origin unknown • Speculate Vascular/Thromboembolism • Mechanical: Amniotic Bands or Streeter’s dysplasia in which multiple limbs are involved

  12. Environmental Etiology • precise origin unknown • Speculate Vascular/Thromboembolism • Mechanical: Amniotic Bands • Maternal: • diabetes mellitus • intrauterine infection

  13. Environmental Etiology • precise origin unknown • Speculate Vascular/Thromboembolism • Mechanical: Amniotic Bands • Maternal causes • Pharmaceutical: • Thalidomide only proven drug • Others suspected, no convincing evidence

  14. Genetic Etiology Chromosomal: ex. Turner’s syndrome XXX

  15. Genetic Etiology Single Gene • Autosomal Dominant: Longitudinal tibial deficiency

  16. Genetic Etiology Single Gene • Autosomal Dominant • Autosomal Recessive: TARThrombocytopenia Absent Radius

  17. Etiology ofAcquired Deficiencies Trauma 67% especially trains and lawn mowers

  18. Etiology ofAcquired Deficiencies • Disease33% majority caused by malignancy, particularly 12-21 years of age

  19. Etiology ofAcquired Deficiencies Surgical conversion for congenital limb deficiency

  20. Classification ofCongenital Limb Deficiency International Organization for Standardization (ISO) restricted to skeletal radiological deficiency

  21. ISO Classification ofCongenital Limb Deficiency Transverse deficiency: no skeletal elements present distally • Name the level of the portion of the limb involved (Upper Arm) • State the portion where the absence occurs (“middle third” or “total”)

  22. ISO Classification ofCongenital Limb Deficiency Left Transverse deficiency: • Forearm • middle third

  23. ISO Classification ofCongenital Limb Deficiency Longitudinal deficiency: skeletal elements present axially or distally • Name the bones involved • State partial or total absence

  24. ISO Classification ofCongenital Limb Deficiency Right Longitudinal deficiency: • Fibula total • Tarsals partial • Rays 3,4,5 total

  25. Frantz and O’Rahilly Classification Congenital Limb Deficiency • terminal or intercalary • transverse or paraxial • complete or incomplete • additional terms • amelia total absence of the limb involved • hemimelia partial absence of the limb involved • phocomelia absence of the long bones

  26. Classification ofAcquired Limb Deficiency Through long bones • Upper Extremity • Transradial = Below Elbow (BE) • Transhumeral = Above Elbow (AE) • Lower Extremity • Transtibial = Below Knee (BK) • Transfemoral = Above Knee (AK) • Limb Salvage and Turnplasty (Van Ness)

  27. Classification ofAcquired Limb Deficiency Through the joint: Name the joint + “Disarticulation” • Upper Extremity: Wrist Disarticulation, etc. • Lower Extremity: Ankle Disarticulation, etc.

  28. Clinical PrinciplesTreatment goals • Healthy body image • Maintain choice for prosthetic options • Optimal function

  29. Clinical PrinciplesGeneral considerations • Team approach • Developmental focus • Return appointments • 3-4 months to eval prosthetic fit & function • Annually for team to assess developmental needs

  30. Clinical PrinciplesPsychosocial Support • Clients need to meet others with similar presentations • Guilt and associated familial problems • Give child control and decision making opportunities • Genetic counseling should be provided to both the child and parents

  31. Clinical PrinciplesSurgical Planning • Timing for congenital conversions

  32. Clinical PrinciplesSurgical Planning • Timing • Growth plate considerations

  33. Clinical PrinciplesSurgical Planning • Timing • Growth plate considerations • Overgrowth with long bone transections

  34. Clinical PrinciplesSurgical Planning • Timing • Growth plate considerations • Overgrowth • Planning for multiple surgical procedures

  35. Clinical Principles OT and PT • When infants, we must train parents and caregivers • Children need minimal “training” instead need opportunity

  36. Clinical Principles Prosthetic designs • Endoskeletal vs. exoskeletal • Flexible vs. rigid • Growth adjustable designs • Socks when applicable can allow for growth • For unilateral deficiencies, legs are used, but arms often rejected • Recreation

  37. Clinical PrinciplesLE Prosthetic Considerations Wearing guidelines • Fit when pull the stand and cruising (9-12 months)

  38. Clinical PrinciplesLE Prosthetic Considerations Foot/Ankle • Toddler gait • Lacks heel strike • Wide base of support

  39. Clinical PrinciplesLE Prosthetic Considerations Child’s gait • more normal gait • benefit from dynamic foot/ankle

  40. Clinical PrinciplesLE Prosthetic Considerations Knee • Toddler has fixed/locked knee • Some centers experimenting with a free knee

  41. Clinical PrinciplesLE Prosthetic Considerations Knee • Toddler has fixed/locked knee • At 3 y.o. temporary reduction of Knee ROM while learning

  42. Clinical PrinciplesLE Prosthetic Considerations Hip • uses alignment stability

  43. Clinical PrinciplesUE Prosthetic Considerations Wearing guidelines • 3 mos for supine grasp • “Fit when sit” • Best before 12 mos. • Common periods for rejection • Unilaterals functional without prosthesis, but more receptive learners than adults

  44. Clinical PrinciplesUE Prosthetic Considerations Grasp • Passive as an infant for gross grasp

  45. Clinical PrinciplesUE Prosthetic Considerations Grasp • Active when developmentally “ready” and able to “understand” grasping function (18-24 months)

  46. Clinical PrinciplesUE Prosthetic Considerations Grasp • Electric switch control can provide active control at an earlier age

  47. Clinical PrinciplesUE Prosthetic Considerations Elbow • Fixed for sitting balance as an infant

  48. Clinical PrinciplesUE Prosthetic Considerations Elbow • Fixed as an infant • Passive friction for toddler • Active locking at 3 years old

  49. Clinical PrinciplesUE Prosthetic Considerations High level prosthetic function poor substitute and often rejected

  50. Special Case Discussion Proximal Femoral Focal Deficiency (PFFD) • Aitken A or B

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