Pediatric Humeral Shaft Fracture Nonunion: A Case Report

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-24-2023

Publication Title

Cureus

Abstract

Humeral shaft fractures in the pediatric population are a commonly encountered injury in everyday practice. Most patients with these injuries are treated without surgery and go on to have an uneventful recovery. Nonunion of these injuries in the pediatric population has been reported only once in the literature. This case report follows a 13-year-old female after a seemingly standard transverse humeral shaft fracture. The patient was treated with a fracture brace initially. No signs of healing were noted at the eight-week post-injury follow-up. The family elected for continued conservative management until the patient returned at four months post-injury with persistent gross motion at the fracture site and no healing on radiographs. Laboratory testing did show that she has mild-to-moderate vitamin D deficiency, which was addressed. The patient underwent nonunion treatment with open reduction, internal fixation, and bone grafting. She went on to full union with an uncomplicated postoperative course. This case presents an interesting and unique case presentation. This report shows that, while rare, it is a potential outcome of humeral shaft fractures in the pediatric population. This case also demonstrates that using the standard adult operative technique for nonunion treatment with rigid internal fixation and bone grafting in a pediatric patient will lead to full-bone healing.

Volume

15

Issue

12

First Page

e51019

DOI

10.7759/cureus.51019

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