Publication | Closed Access
Elbow “TRASH” (The Radiographic Appearance Seemed Harmless) Lesions
46
Citations
7
References
2010
Year
Radial HeadLimb ReconstructionSurgeryElbow SurgeryAnatomyDermatologyCraniomaxillofacial TraumaOrthopaedic SurgeryPediatric Orthopedic SurgerySkeletal TraumaApplied AnatomySurgical PathologyHigh LevelOrthopaedicsPediatric ElbowElbow DisordersRadiologyHealth SciencesChild Abuse ImagingHistopathologyShoulder SurgerySurgical StabilizationCraniofacial SurgeryMedicine
A small subset of serious injuries to the pediatric elbow, deemed “TRASH” lesions, are easily missed on radiograph because of their benign appearance. These lesions however, represent a group of osteochondral injuries, which if treated insufficiently result in chronic long-term consequences. Epiphyseal separations, a displaced intra-articular medial condyles before ossification of the secondary center, capitellar shear fractures, radial head fractures with radiocapitellar subluxation and osteochondral fractures of the olecranon, radial head or distal humerus with joint incongruity comprise the group of “TRASH lesions”. These injuries are usually seen in children less than 10 years of age who sustain high-energy trauma. The challenge is a prompt diagnosis requiring a high level of suspicion and early additional imaging. Many of these injuries are displaced and unstable requiring anatomic reduction, internal fixation with or without soft tissue repair for further stability. These injuries when diagnosed late, missed completely or treated improperly without aggressive surgical care can result in long-term complications. Surgical reconstruction of the late presenting malunion is difficult.
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