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Limping child
Dr Hidayah Almasoud
2020
Defintion
• Limp is defined as an abnormality in gait that is caused by pain,
weakness, or deformity [1,2,5,6]. In toddlers and young children,
conditions that cause limp may present as a refusal to walk or stand.
At times, ataxia may masquerade as a limp, but a careful examination
usually distinguishes this condition based on the absence of
tenderness, weakness, or deformity, and the presence of movements,
often involving the trunk or upper extremities as well as the lower
extremities, characteristic of cerebellar dysfunction fthyyy
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Limp can be further described by gait pathology,
which can help narrow the differential diagnosis
• ●Antalgic gait – Antalgic gait is the most common type of limp encountered in children; it is characterized by a short stance phase
on the affected extremity due to pain. An antalgic gait is associated with bone and soft tissue trauma, infection, inflammation, and
bony lesions.
• ●Toe-walking gait – A child will toe-walk due to heel pain, calf pain, or neurologic abnormality with increased flexor muscle tone in
the lower leg. Examples of conditions that may present with toe-walking include cerebral palsy, peripheral neuropathy, hereditary
spastic paraparesis, or spinal cord disorder [7]. Influenza A may cause acute calf myositis with self-limited toe-walking.
• ●Stooping gait – A stooping gait with hips flexed throughout the gait cycle suggests psoas muscle or obturator nerve irritation
associated with appendicitis, psoas muscle abscess, pelvic inflammatory disease, ovarian torsion, or testicular torsion.
• ●Trendelenburg gait – Trendelenburg gait describes a downward pelvic tilt or shift toward the unaffected limb as it swings through
caused by gluteus medius muscle weakness or spasm in the affected leg when it is in stance phase (picture 1). This gait frequently
accompanies slipped capital femoral epiphysis, Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease, and developmental dysplasia of the hip.
• ●Steppage gait – Patients with a foot drop due to neurologic disease display exaggerated hip and knee flexion as the affected leg
swings through to keep the foot from dragging on the floor. It is often accompanied by a slap of the foot during heel strike.
• ●Vaulting gait – Patients with limb length discrepancy or abnormal knee mobility maintain the knee hyperextended and locked at
the end of stance phase and "vault" over the affected leg.
Antalgic gait Most common; short-stance phase caused by pain in the weight-bearing extremity
Fracture (including toddler or Salter I fracture), unilateral slipped capital femoral
epiphysis, apophysitis, soft tissue injury, transient synovitis, osteomyelitis, septic or
other arthritis, foot foreign body, osteochondritis dissecans, hemarthrosis,
vasoocclusive crisis, benign or malignant tumor, painful foot lesions (eg, plantar
wart, hand-foot-mouth disease, or immunoglobulin A vasculitis [Henoch-Schönlein
purpura])
Trendelenburg gait
Downward pelvic tilt during the swing phase caused by weakness or spasm in the
contralateral gluteus medius muscle
Legg-Calvé-Perthes, unilateral slipped capital femoral epiphysis (moderate to severe
chronic slip), or developmental dysplasia of the hip
Steppage gait
Seen with a foot drop; presents with exaggerated hip and knee flexion during the
swing phase to clear the dropped foot from the floor
Neurologic diseases which cause loss of dorsiflexion of the ankle
Toe-walking gait
Child walks on his/her toes caused by heel pain or by increased flexor muscle tone in
the lower leg
Mild cerebral palsy, Sever disease, heel foreign body, idiopathic, tethered spinal cord
Vaulting gait
The knee is hyperextended and locked at the end of the stance phase of the gait and
the child vaults over the extremity
Limb length discrepancy or abnormal knee mobility
Stooping gait
Patient shuffles with hip flexed due to irritation of the psoas muscle by
intraabdominal inflammation
Appendicitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, psoas muscle abscess
Causes of limp in
children by age
and acuity
Any age Toddler and young child (1 to 5 years of age) School age (5 to 12 years of age) Older child and adolescent (13 to 19 years of age)
Acute
•Abdominal/pelvic abscess, including pelvic
inflammatory disease in adolescent females and
periappendiceal abscess (referred pain)
•Blister or skin wound caused by poor-fitting
footwear Contusion (soft tissue, muscle, or bone)
•Foot foreign body (eg, splinter)
•Fracture
•Osteomyelitis
•Malignancy*
•Meningitis
•Peripheral neuropathy (eg, Guillain-Barré
syndrome)
•Postinfectious (reactive) arthritis
•Septic arthritis¶
•Spinal epidural abscess
•Viral myositis
•Child abuse (eg, traumatic periosteitis or
metaphyseal-epiphyseal fracture)
•DiscitisΔ
•Hand-foot-mouth disease (enterovirus infection)
•Hemarthrosis (hemophilia)
•IgA vasculitis (Henoch-Schönlein purpura)
•Immunization (IM shot)
•Salter-Harris I fracture
•Septic hip
•Toddler's fracture
•Transient synovitis
•Ligament sprain or tear
•Salter-Harris
Chronic
•Abdominal/pelvic
abscess, including pelvic
inflammatory disease in
adolescent females and
periappendiceal abscess
(referred pain)
•Benign bone tumor (eg,
osteoid osteoma or
osteoblastoma)
•JIA and other
inflammatory disease◊
•Malignancy*
•Meningitis (meningeal
irritation)
•Peripheral neuropathy
•Psoas abscess (referred
pain)
•Spinal cord tumor
•Spinal epidural abscess
•Vertebral osteomyelitis
•Cerebral palsy
•Developmental dysplasia
of the hip
•Infantile Blount disease or
other causes of pathologic
bowing (eg, rickets,
skeletal dysplasia, or
asymmetric growth)
•Posterior fossa tumor
(ataxia that may be
misinterpreted as limp)
•Apophysitis of the heel
(Sever disease)
•Avascular necrosis of the
hip (Legg-Calvé-Perthes
disease)
•Closed spinal dysraphism
with tethered cord
•Growing pains
•Leg length discrepancy
•Navicular osteochondrosis
(Köhler disease)
•Osteochondritis dissecans
•Patellar apophysitis
(Sinding-Larsen-Johansson
disease)
•Tarsal coalition
•Transient synovitis
•Apophysitis of the tibial
tuberosity
(Osgood Schlatter disease)
•Complex regional pain
syndrome (lower leg)
•Fifth metatarsal traction
apophysitis (Iselin disease)
•Herniated disc
•Metatarsal avascular
necrosis (Freiberg disease)
•Osteochondritis dissecans
•Scoliosis
•Slipped capital femoral
epiphysis
•Spondylolisthesis
•Spondylolysis
•Stress fracture
•Tendonitis
• The location of pain does not always reflect the location of pathology
[2,3]:
• ●Hip conditions can cause pain in the knee or thigh
• ●Abdominal conditions may cause hip or thigh pain
• ●Back conditions may have referred pain down the back of the leg or
to the lateral thigh
EVALUATION
• A careful history and physical examination provide important
information regarding the likely cause for the limp and guide the
approach to radiographic studies and laboratory testing. Life-
threatening or emergency conditions must be diagnosed promptly
Historical features Causes of limp
Fever
Osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, systemic JIA, malignancy (eg, leukemia, metastatic neuroblastoma), or
acute rheumatic fever
History of trauma Fracture, superficial or deep (muscle) contusion, muscle strain, or ligament sprain
Activity increases pain
SCFE, apophysitis, osteochondrosis, joint hypermobility syndrome, osteochondritis dissecans, or stress
fracture
Activity decreases pain Oligoarticular JIA, complex regional pain syndrome
Cyclic pain pattern, nocturnal
Malignancy (eg, leukemia, Ewing sarcoma, or osteogenic sarcoma) or benign bone tumor (eg, osteoid
osteoma)
Abdominal pain
Immunoglobulin A vasculitis (Henoch-Schönlein purpura), appendicitis with periappendiceal abscess,
ovarian torsion, pelvic inflammatory disease, or psoas abscess
Back pain
Discitis, vertebral osteomyelitis, spondylolysis, spondylolisthesis, spinal epidural abscess, or herniated
disc
Migratory arthralgia Acute rheumatic fever, gonococcal arthritis
Morning stiffness Oligoarticular JIA
Rash
Immunoglobulin A vasculitis (Henoch-Schönlein purpura), serum sickness and serum sickness-like
reactions, SLE, or gonococcal arthritis
Current viral illness (especially influenza) Benign acute myositis
Recent upper respiratory viral illness Transient synovitis
Recent antibiotic use Serum sickness and serum sickness-like reactions
Recent urogenital or gastrointestinal bacterial infection Reactive arthritis
Recent intramuscular injection vaccinations Sterile abscess, muscle inflammation
New or poorly fitting shoes Pressure necrosis or blisters
Family history of connective tissue disorders SLE, JIA
Endocrinopathies (hypothyroidism, panhypopituitarism, and/or hypogonadism) SCFE
Important historical findings associated with specific causes of limp in children
Physical examination
• — A careful physical examination helps to narrow the differential
diagnosis of the limping child, especially when physical findings
suggest a likely site of abnormality either in the lower extremity or
elsewhere (eg, the abdomen, spinal column, or neuromuscular
system
How to approach to examination
• . For patients in significant pain, analgesia appropriate to the degree
of pain should be provided before examination.
• Children who refuse to bear weight on the leg should not be forced to
walk until further assessment has excluded fracture or other serious
pathology
• After evaluation of the gait or if gait evaluation is deferred, further
examination is best performed with the young child sitting in the
caregiver's lap. The physician should start by observing the child's
appearance and positioning from a distance and observing how they
hold or move the lower extremities. If the child is upset, the physician
should permit time for the parent to calm the child.
• f the source of the limp cannot be localized clearly by the history and
simple observation (which is often the case in the young or nonverbal
child), the examiner must proceed systematically through
examination of the spine, central and peripheral nervous system,
hips, knees, ankles, and feet [6]. In addition, the abdomen and
external genitalia should be examined to identify unusual causes of
limp (eg, psoas abscess, pelvic inflammatory disease, or testicular
torsion).
• Obvious traumatic injury on examination in the absence of a credible
history suggests child abuse.
• General appearance
• Vital signs
• Gait
• MSK
• Abdomen and genitalia
• Spine
• Lower extremeties
• Cns
• Skin
DIAGNOSTIC APPROACH
• The history and physical examination should guide further evaluation.
• Laboratory studies and/or imaging are usually not indicated in the
child with an obvious cause for a limp such as:
• ●Superficial soft tissue injury
• ●Insect bite or sting
• ●Plantar wart
• ●Painful plantar vesicles of hand, foot, and mouth disease
• ●Friction blister
• further evaluation is warranted in the limping child, especially in
patients with the following features [1,2,10,18]:
• ●Three years of age and younger
• ●Signs of infection (eg, fever; exquisite joint tenderness with marked
limitation of motion; or localized redness, warmth, or swelling)
• ●Limitation of joint movement on examination, especially at the hip
• ●Inability to walk
• ●History of chronic or intermittent limp
Acute limp
• Signs of infection
• Localized findings, no signs of infection
• No localized findings, no signs of infection
Subacute, chronic, or intermittent limp
• Nighttime pain or pain at rest
• Pain increased with activity
• Joint pain and/or swelling
• Trendelenburg gait
• Ataxia or weakness
• Back or abdominal pain
• Pain or functional disability out of proportion to clinical findings
MANAGEMENT
• Management is dictated by the specific diagnosis. Most children have
a benign or non-urgent cause for their limp and can be managed as
outpatients with appropriate medical follow-up:
• Afebrile children with normal radiographs and pain managed by a nonsteroidal
antiinflammatory medication (eg, ibuprofen) may be discharged to home with
follow-up by the primary care provider to ensure that symptoms resolve.
• ●Patients in whom a toddler's fracture is suspected but not apparent on plain
radiograph should undergo immobilization of the affected leg (eg, short leg splint,
controlled ankle movement [CAM] walker boot, or short leg cast) and, if pain and
limp persist, outpatient follow-up in 7 to 10 days with reimaging (typically a
repeat plain radiograph) and evaluation by an orthopedic surgeon for casting
(image 1). Patients who are asymptomatic out of immobilization can discontinue
immobilization without further imaging or follow-up.
• ●Febrile children without joint effusion and with normal radiographic and blood
studies may also be followed as an outpatient if clinical findings are most
suggestive of myositis or transient synovitis [21].
• Children in whom a provisional diagnosis that does not require
emergency management is apparent or being considered (eg, juvenile
idiopathic arthritis [JIA], Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease, or tarsal
coalition) should have follow-up arranged with an appropriate
specialist.
• Specialty consultation and/or hospital admission should occur for children whose findings indicate life-
threatening or emergency conditions (table 2).
• Examples include:
• ●Surgical drainage of a septic hip should occur as soon as possible once the diagnosis is made. Treatment of
bacterial arthritis in other joints varies according to the site and should also take into account the likelihood
of Lyme arthritis, which does not usually require drainage. (See "Bacterial arthritis: Treatment and outcome
in infants and children" and "Musculoskeletal manifestations of Lyme disease", section on 'Lyme arthritis'.)
• ●Osteomyelitis warrants timely evaluation for the likely pathogen and administration of antibiotics. The
evaluation and treatment of osteomyelitis is discussed separately. (See "Hematogenous osteomyelitis in
children: Management".)
• ●Children with a slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE) require immediate non-weightbearing and urgent
referral to an orthopedic surgeon for operative stabilization. (See "Evaluation and management of slipped
capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE)", section on 'Management'.)
• ●A child with a likely oncologic process (eg, leukemia or bone tumor) needs admission for staging work-up
and initiation of treatment. (See "Bone tumors: Diagnosis and biopsy techniques" and "Overview of the
clinical presentation and diagnosis of acute lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma in children".)
• ●Children with fractures concerning for child abuse should undergo further evaluation as described
separately. (See "Physical child abuse: Diagnostic evaluation and management".)
limping child .pptx
limping child .pptx
limping child .pptx
limping child .pptx
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limping child .pptx

  • 1. Limping child Dr Hidayah Almasoud 2020
  • 2. Defintion • Limp is defined as an abnormality in gait that is caused by pain, weakness, or deformity [1,2,5,6]. In toddlers and young children, conditions that cause limp may present as a refusal to walk or stand. At times, ataxia may masquerade as a limp, but a careful examination usually distinguishes this condition based on the absence of tenderness, weakness, or deformity, and the presence of movements, often involving the trunk or upper extremities as well as the lower extremities, characteristic of cerebellar dysfunction fthyyy gtffgtfxgrfrxddfr
  • 3. Limp can be further described by gait pathology, which can help narrow the differential diagnosis • ●Antalgic gait – Antalgic gait is the most common type of limp encountered in children; it is characterized by a short stance phase on the affected extremity due to pain. An antalgic gait is associated with bone and soft tissue trauma, infection, inflammation, and bony lesions. • ●Toe-walking gait – A child will toe-walk due to heel pain, calf pain, or neurologic abnormality with increased flexor muscle tone in the lower leg. Examples of conditions that may present with toe-walking include cerebral palsy, peripheral neuropathy, hereditary spastic paraparesis, or spinal cord disorder [7]. Influenza A may cause acute calf myositis with self-limited toe-walking. • ●Stooping gait – A stooping gait with hips flexed throughout the gait cycle suggests psoas muscle or obturator nerve irritation associated with appendicitis, psoas muscle abscess, pelvic inflammatory disease, ovarian torsion, or testicular torsion. • ●Trendelenburg gait – Trendelenburg gait describes a downward pelvic tilt or shift toward the unaffected limb as it swings through caused by gluteus medius muscle weakness or spasm in the affected leg when it is in stance phase (picture 1). This gait frequently accompanies slipped capital femoral epiphysis, Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease, and developmental dysplasia of the hip. • ●Steppage gait – Patients with a foot drop due to neurologic disease display exaggerated hip and knee flexion as the affected leg swings through to keep the foot from dragging on the floor. It is often accompanied by a slap of the foot during heel strike. • ●Vaulting gait – Patients with limb length discrepancy or abnormal knee mobility maintain the knee hyperextended and locked at the end of stance phase and "vault" over the affected leg.
  • 4.
  • 5. Antalgic gait Most common; short-stance phase caused by pain in the weight-bearing extremity Fracture (including toddler or Salter I fracture), unilateral slipped capital femoral epiphysis, apophysitis, soft tissue injury, transient synovitis, osteomyelitis, septic or other arthritis, foot foreign body, osteochondritis dissecans, hemarthrosis, vasoocclusive crisis, benign or malignant tumor, painful foot lesions (eg, plantar wart, hand-foot-mouth disease, or immunoglobulin A vasculitis [Henoch-Schönlein purpura]) Trendelenburg gait Downward pelvic tilt during the swing phase caused by weakness or spasm in the contralateral gluteus medius muscle Legg-Calvé-Perthes, unilateral slipped capital femoral epiphysis (moderate to severe chronic slip), or developmental dysplasia of the hip Steppage gait Seen with a foot drop; presents with exaggerated hip and knee flexion during the swing phase to clear the dropped foot from the floor Neurologic diseases which cause loss of dorsiflexion of the ankle Toe-walking gait Child walks on his/her toes caused by heel pain or by increased flexor muscle tone in the lower leg Mild cerebral palsy, Sever disease, heel foreign body, idiopathic, tethered spinal cord Vaulting gait The knee is hyperextended and locked at the end of the stance phase of the gait and the child vaults over the extremity Limb length discrepancy or abnormal knee mobility Stooping gait Patient shuffles with hip flexed due to irritation of the psoas muscle by intraabdominal inflammation Appendicitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, psoas muscle abscess
  • 6. Causes of limp in children by age and acuity Any age Toddler and young child (1 to 5 years of age) School age (5 to 12 years of age) Older child and adolescent (13 to 19 years of age) Acute •Abdominal/pelvic abscess, including pelvic inflammatory disease in adolescent females and periappendiceal abscess (referred pain) •Blister or skin wound caused by poor-fitting footwear Contusion (soft tissue, muscle, or bone) •Foot foreign body (eg, splinter) •Fracture •Osteomyelitis •Malignancy* •Meningitis •Peripheral neuropathy (eg, Guillain-Barré syndrome) •Postinfectious (reactive) arthritis •Septic arthritis¶ •Spinal epidural abscess •Viral myositis •Child abuse (eg, traumatic periosteitis or metaphyseal-epiphyseal fracture) •DiscitisΔ •Hand-foot-mouth disease (enterovirus infection) •Hemarthrosis (hemophilia) •IgA vasculitis (Henoch-Schönlein purpura) •Immunization (IM shot) •Salter-Harris I fracture •Septic hip •Toddler's fracture •Transient synovitis •Ligament sprain or tear •Salter-Harris
  • 7. Chronic •Abdominal/pelvic abscess, including pelvic inflammatory disease in adolescent females and periappendiceal abscess (referred pain) •Benign bone tumor (eg, osteoid osteoma or osteoblastoma) •JIA and other inflammatory disease◊ •Malignancy* •Meningitis (meningeal irritation) •Peripheral neuropathy •Psoas abscess (referred pain) •Spinal cord tumor •Spinal epidural abscess •Vertebral osteomyelitis •Cerebral palsy •Developmental dysplasia of the hip •Infantile Blount disease or other causes of pathologic bowing (eg, rickets, skeletal dysplasia, or asymmetric growth) •Posterior fossa tumor (ataxia that may be misinterpreted as limp) •Apophysitis of the heel (Sever disease) •Avascular necrosis of the hip (Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease) •Closed spinal dysraphism with tethered cord •Growing pains •Leg length discrepancy •Navicular osteochondrosis (Köhler disease) •Osteochondritis dissecans •Patellar apophysitis (Sinding-Larsen-Johansson disease) •Tarsal coalition •Transient synovitis •Apophysitis of the tibial tuberosity (Osgood Schlatter disease) •Complex regional pain syndrome (lower leg) •Fifth metatarsal traction apophysitis (Iselin disease) •Herniated disc •Metatarsal avascular necrosis (Freiberg disease) •Osteochondritis dissecans •Scoliosis •Slipped capital femoral epiphysis •Spondylolisthesis •Spondylolysis •Stress fracture •Tendonitis
  • 8. • The location of pain does not always reflect the location of pathology [2,3]: • ●Hip conditions can cause pain in the knee or thigh • ●Abdominal conditions may cause hip or thigh pain • ●Back conditions may have referred pain down the back of the leg or to the lateral thigh
  • 9. EVALUATION • A careful history and physical examination provide important information regarding the likely cause for the limp and guide the approach to radiographic studies and laboratory testing. Life- threatening or emergency conditions must be diagnosed promptly
  • 10. Historical features Causes of limp Fever Osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, systemic JIA, malignancy (eg, leukemia, metastatic neuroblastoma), or acute rheumatic fever History of trauma Fracture, superficial or deep (muscle) contusion, muscle strain, or ligament sprain Activity increases pain SCFE, apophysitis, osteochondrosis, joint hypermobility syndrome, osteochondritis dissecans, or stress fracture Activity decreases pain Oligoarticular JIA, complex regional pain syndrome Cyclic pain pattern, nocturnal Malignancy (eg, leukemia, Ewing sarcoma, or osteogenic sarcoma) or benign bone tumor (eg, osteoid osteoma) Abdominal pain Immunoglobulin A vasculitis (Henoch-Schönlein purpura), appendicitis with periappendiceal abscess, ovarian torsion, pelvic inflammatory disease, or psoas abscess Back pain Discitis, vertebral osteomyelitis, spondylolysis, spondylolisthesis, spinal epidural abscess, or herniated disc Migratory arthralgia Acute rheumatic fever, gonococcal arthritis Morning stiffness Oligoarticular JIA Rash Immunoglobulin A vasculitis (Henoch-Schönlein purpura), serum sickness and serum sickness-like reactions, SLE, or gonococcal arthritis Current viral illness (especially influenza) Benign acute myositis Recent upper respiratory viral illness Transient synovitis Recent antibiotic use Serum sickness and serum sickness-like reactions Recent urogenital or gastrointestinal bacterial infection Reactive arthritis Recent intramuscular injection vaccinations Sterile abscess, muscle inflammation New or poorly fitting shoes Pressure necrosis or blisters Family history of connective tissue disorders SLE, JIA Endocrinopathies (hypothyroidism, panhypopituitarism, and/or hypogonadism) SCFE Important historical findings associated with specific causes of limp in children
  • 11. Physical examination • — A careful physical examination helps to narrow the differential diagnosis of the limping child, especially when physical findings suggest a likely site of abnormality either in the lower extremity or elsewhere (eg, the abdomen, spinal column, or neuromuscular system
  • 12. How to approach to examination • . For patients in significant pain, analgesia appropriate to the degree of pain should be provided before examination. • Children who refuse to bear weight on the leg should not be forced to walk until further assessment has excluded fracture or other serious pathology • After evaluation of the gait or if gait evaluation is deferred, further examination is best performed with the young child sitting in the caregiver's lap. The physician should start by observing the child's appearance and positioning from a distance and observing how they hold or move the lower extremities. If the child is upset, the physician should permit time for the parent to calm the child.
  • 13. • f the source of the limp cannot be localized clearly by the history and simple observation (which is often the case in the young or nonverbal child), the examiner must proceed systematically through examination of the spine, central and peripheral nervous system, hips, knees, ankles, and feet [6]. In addition, the abdomen and external genitalia should be examined to identify unusual causes of limp (eg, psoas abscess, pelvic inflammatory disease, or testicular torsion). • Obvious traumatic injury on examination in the absence of a credible history suggests child abuse.
  • 14. • General appearance • Vital signs • Gait • MSK • Abdomen and genitalia • Spine • Lower extremeties • Cns • Skin
  • 15.
  • 16. DIAGNOSTIC APPROACH • The history and physical examination should guide further evaluation.
  • 17. • Laboratory studies and/or imaging are usually not indicated in the child with an obvious cause for a limp such as: • ●Superficial soft tissue injury • ●Insect bite or sting • ●Plantar wart • ●Painful plantar vesicles of hand, foot, and mouth disease • ●Friction blister
  • 18. • further evaluation is warranted in the limping child, especially in patients with the following features [1,2,10,18]: • ●Three years of age and younger • ●Signs of infection (eg, fever; exquisite joint tenderness with marked limitation of motion; or localized redness, warmth, or swelling) • ●Limitation of joint movement on examination, especially at the hip • ●Inability to walk • ●History of chronic or intermittent limp
  • 19. Acute limp • Signs of infection • Localized findings, no signs of infection • No localized findings, no signs of infection
  • 20. Subacute, chronic, or intermittent limp • Nighttime pain or pain at rest • Pain increased with activity • Joint pain and/or swelling • Trendelenburg gait • Ataxia or weakness • Back or abdominal pain • Pain or functional disability out of proportion to clinical findings
  • 21.
  • 22. MANAGEMENT • Management is dictated by the specific diagnosis. Most children have a benign or non-urgent cause for their limp and can be managed as outpatients with appropriate medical follow-up:
  • 23. • Afebrile children with normal radiographs and pain managed by a nonsteroidal antiinflammatory medication (eg, ibuprofen) may be discharged to home with follow-up by the primary care provider to ensure that symptoms resolve. • ●Patients in whom a toddler's fracture is suspected but not apparent on plain radiograph should undergo immobilization of the affected leg (eg, short leg splint, controlled ankle movement [CAM] walker boot, or short leg cast) and, if pain and limp persist, outpatient follow-up in 7 to 10 days with reimaging (typically a repeat plain radiograph) and evaluation by an orthopedic surgeon for casting (image 1). Patients who are asymptomatic out of immobilization can discontinue immobilization without further imaging or follow-up. • ●Febrile children without joint effusion and with normal radiographic and blood studies may also be followed as an outpatient if clinical findings are most suggestive of myositis or transient synovitis [21].
  • 24. • Children in whom a provisional diagnosis that does not require emergency management is apparent or being considered (eg, juvenile idiopathic arthritis [JIA], Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease, or tarsal coalition) should have follow-up arranged with an appropriate specialist.
  • 25. • Specialty consultation and/or hospital admission should occur for children whose findings indicate life- threatening or emergency conditions (table 2). • Examples include: • ●Surgical drainage of a septic hip should occur as soon as possible once the diagnosis is made. Treatment of bacterial arthritis in other joints varies according to the site and should also take into account the likelihood of Lyme arthritis, which does not usually require drainage. (See "Bacterial arthritis: Treatment and outcome in infants and children" and "Musculoskeletal manifestations of Lyme disease", section on 'Lyme arthritis'.) • ●Osteomyelitis warrants timely evaluation for the likely pathogen and administration of antibiotics. The evaluation and treatment of osteomyelitis is discussed separately. (See "Hematogenous osteomyelitis in children: Management".) • ●Children with a slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE) require immediate non-weightbearing and urgent referral to an orthopedic surgeon for operative stabilization. (See "Evaluation and management of slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE)", section on 'Management'.) • ●A child with a likely oncologic process (eg, leukemia or bone tumor) needs admission for staging work-up and initiation of treatment. (See "Bone tumors: Diagnosis and biopsy techniques" and "Overview of the clinical presentation and diagnosis of acute lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma in children".) • ●Children with fractures concerning for child abuse should undergo further evaluation as described separately. (See "Physical child abuse: Diagnostic evaluation and management".)

Editor's Notes

  1. Limp is defined as an abnormality in gait that is caused by pain, weakness, or deformity [1,2,5,6]. In toddlers and young children, conditions that cause limp may present as a refusal to walk or stand. At times, ataxia may masquerade as a limp, but a careful examination usually distinguishes this condition based on the absence of tenderness, weakness, or deformity, and the presence of movements, often involving the trunk or upper extremities as well as the lower extremities, characteristic of cerebellar dysfunction
  2. Limp can be further described by gait pathology, which can help narrow the differential diagnosis (table 3): ●Antalgic gait – Antalgic gait is the most common type of limp encountered in children; it is characterized by a short stance phase on the affected extremity due to pain. An antalgic gait is associated with bone and soft tissue trauma, infection, inflammation, and bony lesions. ●Toe-walking gait – A child will toe-walk due to heel pain, calf pain, or neurologic abnormality with increased flexor muscle tone in the lower leg. Examples of conditions that may present with toe-walking include cerebral palsy, peripheral neuropathy, hereditary spastic paraparesis, or spinal cord disorder [7]. Influenza A may cause acute calf myositis with self-limited toe-walking. ●Stooping gait – A stooping gait with hips flexed throughout the gait cycle suggests psoas muscle or obturator nerve irritation associated with appendicitis, psoas muscle abscess, pelvic inflammatory disease, ovarian torsion, or testicular torsion. ●Trendelenburg gait – Trendelenburg gait describes a downward pelvic tilt or shift toward the unaffected limb as it swings through caused by gluteus medius muscle weakness or spasm in the affected leg when it is in stance phase (picture 1). This gait frequently accompanies slipped capital femoral epiphysis, Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease, and developmental dysplasia of the hip. ●Steppage gait – Patients with a foot drop due to neurologic disease display exaggerated hip and knee flexion as the affected leg swings through to keep the foot from dragging on the floor. It is often accompanied by a slap of the foot during heel strike. ●Vaulting gait – Patients with limb length discrepancy or abnormal knee mobility maintain the knee hyperextended and locked at the end of stance phase and "vault" over the affected leg.
  3. Causes of limp in children by location of abnormality Lower extremity (bone) Osteomyelitis Fracture, including occult fracture (child abuse) and stress fracture Traction apophysitis Sinding-Larsen-Johansson disease (inferior patella) Sever disease (calcaneus) Osgood-Schlatter disease (tibial tuberosity) Iselin disease (base of the 5th metatarsal) Osteochondrosis Freiberg disease (head of the 2nd metatarsal) Köhler disease (navicular bone of the foot) Slipped capital femoral epiphysis Idiopathic avascular necrosis of the hip (Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease)  Benign and malignant tumors Leukemia Metastatic neuroblastoma Osteogenic sarcoma Ewing sarcoma Osteoid osteoma Limb length discrepancy Pathologic varus (bow legs)  Pathologic valgus (knock knees) Tarsal coalition Torsional deformities Vasoocclusive crisis (sickle cell disease) Lower extremity (joint) Transient synovitis of the hip Bacterial (septic) arthritis Lyme arthritis (endemic regions) Osteochondritis dissecans Developmental dysplasia of the hip Oligoarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) and other rheumatic diseases (eg, systemic lupus erythematosus, systemic JIA) Immunoglobulin A vasculitis (Henoch-Schönlein purpura) Serum sickness and serum sickness-like reactions Reactive arthritis Acute rheumatic fever Joint hypermobility syndrome Hemarthrosis (causes include trauma, hemophilia, and, rarely,  pigmented villonodular synovitis) Lower extremity (soft tissue) Contusion (superficial or deep [muscle]) Muscle strain Ligament sprain Tendinopathy Compartment syndrome Benign acute myositis Foot injury (foreign body, blisters, puncture wound, abrasions, or lacerations) Hand, foot, and mouth disease (painful vesicles on the plantar foot) Intramuscular vaccination Insect bite or sting (eg, fire ant, bee, wasp, or yellow jacket) Superficial infection (eg, cellulitis, cutaneous abscess, or perirectal abscess) Pyomyositis Spinal column  Spondylolysis and spondylolisthesis Closed spinal dysraphism with tethered cord Herniated vertebral disc Spinal epidural abscess   Discitis Skeletal tuberculosis (Pott disease)  Neuromuscular Cerebral palsy Peripheral neuropathy Muscular dystrophy Myasthenia gravis  Tick paralysis  Complex regional pain syndrome (reflex sympathetic dystrophy) Spinal cord tumor Intra-abdominal Appendicitis Pelvic inflammatory disease Pelvic abscess Psoas abscess Iliac adenitis Other Testicular torsion Somatic symptom disorder (conversion disorder)