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Salter-Harris III Injury

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Now we've gotten to Salter-Harris III.

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We've talked about I and II; now it's time for III.

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And for this one, I'm going

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to show you knee images.

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The image on your left is a plain radiograph.

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The middle image is a coronal reconstruction

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of a CT scan that was axially acquired.

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The image on the right is our

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dual echo steady-state MR image.

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Let's look at the plain film first.

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On the plain film, we see that there is a

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lucency that's sort of vertically and obliquely

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oriented through the epiphysis, exiting out

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into the joint space with maybe a few flecks

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of bony fragments here, perhaps in the joint.

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But that fracture line

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extends to the medial physis.

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The medial physis itself is widened.

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Compare that to the lateral

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physis, as you see over here.

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There is subtle widening on that side, so

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we know this must be a Salter-Harris injury.

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The fact that it doesn't go through the

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metaphysis, at least on the plain radiograph,

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tells me that we're looking at a Salter-Harris III

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injury, the beginning of what we classify as

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a longitudinally oriented Salter-Harris injury.

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So here's a CT scan reconstruction.

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As we go through, indeed, we see that there

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is widening of that physis, extending

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obliquely and then vertically down

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into the epiphysis and exiting

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into the articular surface.

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As we go back and forth, we notice

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that indeed that physis is wider

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than the adjacent contralateral side

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over here on the lateral aspect.

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And what do we see on the MR?

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Something very similar.

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Again, we see fluid and edema

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here where the physis should be.

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Compare that to the normal

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appearing physis on the other side.

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So there's separation here at the

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physis, and the fracture line extends

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vertically downwards into the joint space.

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So a nice example of a Salter-Harris III

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vertical oriented or

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longitudinally oriented fracture.

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Much more likely to have bony bridging

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later on in life than the other

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two that we've discussed so far.

Report

Faculty

Mahesh Thapa, MD, MEd, FAAP

Division Chief of Musculoskeletal Imaging, and Director of Diagnostic Imaging Professor

Seattle Children's & University of Washington

Tags

X-Ray (Plain Films)

Trauma

Pediatrics

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

CT

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