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Dive into the research topics where Richard S. Davidson is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard S. Davidson.


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 2001

Titanium elastic nails for pediatric femur fractures: a multicenter study of early results with analysis of complications.

John M. Flynn; Timothy Hresko; Richard A. K. Reynolds; R. Dale Blasier; Richard S. Davidson; James R. Kasser

Titanium elastic nailing is used instead of traction and casting in many European centers, but limited availability has prevented widespread use in North America. Before a planned general release in America, titanium elastic nails (TENs) were trialed at several major pediatric trauma centers. This multicenter study is a critical analysis of early results and complications of the initial experience. Overall, TENs allowed rapid mobilization with few complications. The results were excellent or satisfactory in 57 of the 58 cases. No child lost rotational alignment in the postoperative period. Irritation of the soft tissue near the knee by the nail tip occurred in four patients, leading to a deeper infection in two cases. As indications, implantation technique, and aftercare are refined, TENs may prove to be the ideal implant to stabilize many pediatric femur fractures, avoiding the prolonged immobilization and complications of traction and spica casting.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2004

Comparison of Titanium Elastic Nails with Traction and a Spica Cast to Treat Femoral Fractures in Children

John M. Flynn; Lael M. Luedtke; Theodore J. Ganley; Judy Dawson; Richard S. Davidson; John P. Dormans; Malcolm L. Ecker; John R. Gregg; B. David Horn; Denis S. Drummond

BACKGROUND Titanium elastic nails are commonly used to stabilize femoral fractures in school-aged children, but there have been few studies assessing the risks and benefits of this procedure compared with those of traditional traction and application of a spica cast. This prospective cohort study was designed to evaluate these two methods of treatment, with a specific focus on the first year after injury, the period when the treatment method should have the greatest impact. METHODS Eighty-three consecutive children, six to sixteen years of age, were studied prospectively. Factors that were analyzed included clinical and radiographic data, complications, hospital charges, and outcome data. Outcome and recovery were assessed both with the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons Pediatric Outcomes Data Collections Instrument, version 2.0, and according to a series of important recovery milestones including the time to walking with aids, time to independent walking, time absent from school, and time until full activity was allowed. RESULTS Thirty-five children (thirty-five fractures), with a mean age of 8.7 years, were treated with traction and application of a spica cast, and forty-eight children (forty-nine fractures), with a mean age of 10.2 years, were treated with titanium elastic nails. All fractures healed, and no child sustained a complication that was expected to cause permanent disability. At one year after the fracture, eighty of the children had acceptable alignment and no inequality between the lengths of the lower extremities. The remaining three children, who had an unsatisfactory result, had been treated with traction and a spica cast. Twelve patients (34%) treated with traction and a cast had a complication compared with ten patients (21%) treated with titanium elastic nails. Compared with the children treated with traction and a cast, those treated with titanium elastic nails had shorter hospitalization, walked with support sooner, walked independently sooner, and returned to school earlier. These differences were significant (p < 0.0001). We could detect no difference in total hospital charges between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS The results of this prospective study support the recent empiric observations and published results of retrospective series indicating that a child in whom a femoral fracture is treated with titanium elastic nails achieves recovery milestones significantly faster than a child treated with traction and a spica cast. Hospital charges for the two treatment methods are similar. The complication rate associated with nailing compares favorably with that associated with traction and application of a spica cast.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1995

Complications in children managed with immobilization in a halo vest.

John P. Dormans; A A Criscitiello; Denis S. Drummond; Richard S. Davidson

Thirty-seven patients who were three to sixteen years old were managed with immobilization in a halo vest between 1987 and 1993. Twenty-four patients (65 per cent) had the halo vest applied in conjunction with operative arthrodesis of the cervical spine; the remaining thirteen patients (35 per cent) had the halo vest applied to immobilize the cervical spine after trauma. Complications occurred in twenty-five patients (68 per cent). Pin-site infections were the most common complications, developing in twenty-two patients. Grade-II infections (purulent drainage) developed more frequently in children who were eleven years old or more: they were identified in five of fourteen such patients, compared with two of twenty-three patients who were ten years old or less. There was a tendency toward more grade-I infections (non-purulent drainage, with or without erythema) and loosening of the pins in the children who were ten years old or less: eleven of twenty-three such patients had each of those complications, compared with four of fourteen children who were eleven years old or more. Both loosening and infection occurred more frequently at the anterior pin sites. Other complications included one dural penetration, one transient injury of the supraorbital nerve, and three pin-site scars that were considered by the family to be objectionable. There were no complications related to the vest part of the halo vest. Younger patients who had a halo construct with more than four pins (multiple-pin constructs) had a similar rate of complications compared with patients who were managed with a standard four-pin halo construct.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 1990

Acute osteomyelitis in children: a review of 116 cases.

Richard J. Scott; Mark R. Christofersen; William W. Robertson; Richard S. Davidson; Lynn Rankin; Denis S. Drummond

Summary We reviewed 116 cases of acute hematogenous osteomyelitis (AHO) (without septic joints) from 1979 to 1985 to establish current patterns of clinical presentation, modes of treatment, and success of therapy. We found that patients present early in the course of their disease, and many have no findings other than local tenderness and an elevated sedimentation rate. Sixty-four of the patients were treated nonoperatively. The average antibiotic treatment time was 2 weeks by intravenous (i.v.) administration followed by additional outpatient oral therapy for periods of up to 4 weeks. This treatment regimen applied specifically to acute osteomyelitis led to no known treatment failures.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1990

Neural injuries associated with supracondylar fractures of the humerus in children.

R W Culp; A L Osterman; Richard S. Davidson; T Skirven; F W Bora

A retrospective review of displaced extension-type supracondylar fractures of the humerus in 101 children who were seen consecutively revealed eighteen associated neural injuries in thirteen children. Nine of the neural injuries in eight patients spontaneously resolved at a mean of 2.5 months (range, 1.5 to five months) after injury. The remaining nine lesions in five patients were explored at a mean of 7.5 months (range, five to fourteen months) after injury, because clinical and electromyographic studies showed no return of function. Neurolysis was performed on eight of the nerves that were explored (in five patients), and the remaining radial nerve was found to be completely lacerated and needed nerve-grafting. The length of follow-up after neurolysis averaged twenty-five months (range, thirteen to forty-four months). All five patients had functional recovery, as documented by range-of-motion, grip-strength and lateral pinch-strength, and von Frey and two-point-discrimination sensory testing. The patient who had had nerve-grafting never recovered neural function, and tendon transfers were needed. We concluded that observation and supportive therapy is the preferred initial approach for children who have a neural injury associated with a closed, displaced supracondylar fracture of the humerus. However, if there is no clinical or electromyographic evidence of return of neural function at five months after injury, exploration and neurolysis should be performed. If the nerve is in continuity, the prognosis after neurolysis is excellent.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1994

Ultrasonographic evaluation of the elbow in infants and young children after suspected trauma.

Richard S. Davidson; R I Markowitz; John P. Dormans; Denis S. Drummond

Fractures and epiphyseal injuries in the region of the elbow are uncommon in infants and young children, but they can be very difficult to diagnose and delineate accurately. In addition to plain radiography, invasive or costly procedures such as arthrography and magnetic resonance imaging traditionally have been used to evaluate these injuries. We used high-resolution real-time ultrasonography to evaluate a suspected injury of the elbow in seven infants and one ten-year-old child. Three of the infants had a physeal separation, two had a supracondylar fracture, and two had no skeletal injury. The child had an avulsion fracture of the lateral epicondyle of the humerus and an effusion in the joint. The ultrasonographic findings were confirmed by arthrography in three patients, by open reduction in one, and by follow-up radiographs in all. None of the ultrasonographic studies were performed with the patient under general anesthesia. Ultrasonography, a readily available, non-invasive technique, can be used to evaluate the unossified epiphysis about the elbow of infants and young children; to demonstrate dislocations, fractures, and physeal separations; to identify a hinge of soft tissue at the site of a fracture; to identify interposition of soft tissue between fracture fragments; and to aid in the planning of closed and open reductions.


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 1996

Vascular Injuries and Their Sequelae in Pediatric Supracondylar Humeral Fractures: Toward a Goal of Prevention

Lawson A. Copley; John P. Dormans; Richard S. Davidson

Between 1988 and 1994, 128 consecutive children with grade III supracondylar humeral fractures presented for treatment at our hospital. Seventeen had absent or diminished (detected with Doppler but not palpable) radial pulses on initial examination. Fourteen of these 17 children recovered pulse (palpable) after reduction and stabilization of their fractures. The remaining three had persistent absence of radial pulse. Each of these three children was explored immediately and found to have a significant vascular injury requiring repair. Two of the 14 children who had initially regained their pulses had a progressive postoperative deterioration in their circulatory status during the first 24-36 h, including loss of the radial pulse. Both of these children had arteriograms that identified vascular injuries. Both underwent exploration and bypass grafting. One of these two children had been transferred 48 h after injury, resulting in delay of management of his vascular impairment. Despite exploration, vascular repair, and fasciotomy, he ultimately developed Volkmanns ischemic contracture. All five children with significant vascular injuries had absent or diminished radial pulses on presentation. Immediate reduction and fixation followed by careful evaluation and treatment of ischemia were associated with excellent outcome in four of the five children.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1999

Diagnosing aneurysmal and unicameral bone cysts with magnetic resonance imaging.

Raymond J. Sullivan; James S. Meyer; John P. Dormans; Richard S. Davidson

The differential between aneurysmal bone cysts and unicameral bone cysts usually is clear clinically and radiographically. Occasionally there are cases in which the diagnosis is not clear. Because natural history and treatment are different, the ability to distinguish between these two entities before surgery is important. The authors reviewed, in a blinded fashion, the preoperative magnetic resonance images to investigate criteria that could be used to differentiate between the two lesions. All patients had operative or pathologic confirmation of an aneurysmal bone cyst or unicameral bone cyst. The authors analyzed the preoperative magnetic resonance images of 14 patients with diagnostically difficult bone cysts (eight children with unicameral bone cysts and six children with aneurysmal bone cysts) and correlated these findings with diagnosis after biopsy or cyst aspiration and contrast injection. The presence of a double density fluid level within the lesion strongly indicated that the lesion was an aneurysmal bone cyst, rather than a unicameral bone cyst. Other criteria that suggested the lesion was an aneurysmal bone cyst were the presence of septations within the lesion and signal characteristics of low intensity on T1 images and high intensity on T2 images. The authors identified a way of helping to differentiate between aneurysmal bone cysts and unicameral bone cysts on magnetic resonance images. Double density fluid level, septation, and low signal on T1 images and high signal on T2 images strongly suggest the bone cyst in question is an aneurysmal bone cyst, rather than a unicameral bone cyst. This may be helpful before surgery for the child who has a cystic lesion for which radiographic features do not allow a clear differentiation of unicameral bone cyst from aneurysmal bone cyst.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1997

Accessory soleus muscle. A report of 4 cases and review of literature.

Jeffrey T. Brodie; John P. Dormans; John R. Gregg; Richard S. Davidson

Cadaveric studies have demonstrated the incidence of an accessory soleus muscle ranges from 0.7% to 5.5%. The differential diagnosis of a painful soft tissue mass in the posteromedial region of the ankle includes ganglion, lipoma, hemangioma, synovioma, and sarcomas. In light of these possibilities, most of the early reports of accessory soleus included evaluation and treatment with biopsy, fasciotomy, or excision. Four patients, ranging in age from 14 to 66 years of age at the time of presentation, are discussed. Reports in the literature indicate that accessory soleus is a benign condition, and in most patients, a conservative approach is indicated. In addition, magnetic resonance imaging is the preferred study for the evaluation of this condition. If a diagnosis of accessory soleus is made, and the patient has no symptoms, observation is recommended. However, if the patient has symptoms, fasciotomy generally is a successful form of treatment. For symptoms that persist after fasciotomy, excision of the accessory soleus can be curative.


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 1986

Slipped capital femoral epiphysis: an analysis of 80 patients as to pin placement and number

Jeffery L. Stambough; Richard S. Davidson; Ronald D. Ellis; John R. Gregg

Summary: A retrospective study of 80 patients with chronic slipped capital femoral epiphysis was performed, analyzing the clinical results with regard to pin placement and pin number. Follow-up averaged >2 years, with 86% of the 80 patients obtaining a satisfactory clinical outcome. Serious complications occurred in 10 patients. The severity of complications increased as the number of pins used increased (p < 0.07). A varus pin position resulting in a more inferior pin placement in the proximal femoral epiphysis was found to be associated with the fewest complications. When the pin tip avoided the superior and anterior quadrants in the proximal femoral epiphysis and was >2.5 mm away from subchondral bone, the complication rate was decreased (p < 0.003).

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John P. Dormans

University of Pennsylvania

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Denis S. Drummond

University of Pennsylvania

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James J. McCarthy

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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B. David Horn

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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James S. Meyer

University of Pennsylvania

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John R. Gregg

University of Pennsylvania

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Soroosh Mahboubi

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Anne M. Hubbard

University of Pennsylvania

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John M. Flynn

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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