2. 7 yo boy presents to the
er complaining of several
weeks of left hips and
knee pain. Mom brings
him in today because she
notes that he has been
limping. They deny
history of trauma. No
fevers, weight changes,
or other complaints.
PE
Afebrile. VSS
Gen: Well appearing,
non-toxic. Short stature.
Extrem: Decrease ROM
left hip. Esp w/ internal
rotation and abduction
3.
4.
5. Consider differential diagnosis – Sickle cell disease,
septic hip, trauma
Consider CBC and ESR. B/L hip films and frog leg
views can be helpful
NSAIDs are the mainstay for treatment of pain control
Orthopedic follow-up
6. Caused by interruption of blood flow to the capital
femoral epiphysis. Bone infarction occurs and
subchondral fractures occur
Most common in males.
Patients that present at a younger age typically have a
better outcome
15-20% of patients have bilateral problems but they are
typically at different stages
7.
8. Nochimson, G et al. “Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease in
Emergency Medicine”. Emedicine.com. 4/2011.
Tininalli, J et al. “Emergency Medicine: A
Comprehensive Study Guide”. 6th ed. 2003
Wheeless, C. “Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease”.
Wheelessonline.com. 4/2011.