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Dive into the research topics where Vernon T. Tolo is active.

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Featured researches published by Vernon T. Tolo.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2001

Operative treatment of supracondylar fractures of the humerus in children. The consequences of pin placement

David L. Skaggs; Julia M. Hale; Jeffrey Bassett; Cornelia Kaminsky; Robert M. Kay; Vernon T. Tolo

Background: The commonly accepted treatment of displaced supracondylar fractures of the humerus in children is fracture reduction and percutaneous pin fixation; however, there is controversy about the optimal placement of the pins. A crossed‐pin configuration is believed to be mechanically more stable than lateral pins alone; however, the ulnar nerve can be injured with the use of a medial pin. It has not been proved that the added stability of a medial pin is clinically necessary since, in young children, pin fixation is always augmented with immobilization in a splint or cast. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the results of reduction and Kirschner wire fixation of 345 extension-type supracondylar fractures in children. Maintenance of fracture reduction and evidence of ulnar nerve injury were evaluated in relation to pin configuration and fracture pattern. Of 141 children who had a Gartland type-2 fracture (a partially intact posterior cortex), seventy‐four were treated with lateral pins only and sixty-seven were treated with crossed pins. Of 204 children who had a Gartland type-3 (unstable) fracture, fifty‐one were treated with lateral pins only and 153 were treated with crossed pins. Results: There was no difference with regard to maintenance of fracture reduction, as seen on anteroposterior and lateral radiographs, between the crossed pins and the lateral pins. The configuration of the pins did not affect the maintenance of reduction of either the Gartland type-2 fractures or the Gartland type-3 fractures. Ulnar nerve injury was not seen in the 125 patients in whom only lateral pins were used. The use of a medial pin was associated with ulnar nerve injury in 4% (six) of 149 patients in whom the pin was applied without hyperflexion of the elbow and in 15% (eleven) of seventy‐one in whom the medial pin was applied with the elbow hyperflexed. Two years after the pinning, one of the seventeen children with ulnar nerve injury had persistent motor weakness and a sensory deficit. Conclusions: Fixation with only lateral pins is safe and effective for both Gartland type-2 and Gartland type-3 (unstable) supracondylar fractures of the humerus in children. The use of only lateral pins prevents iatrogenic injury to the ulnar nerve. On the basis of our findings, we do not recommend the routine use of crossed pins in the treatment of supracondylar fractures of the humerus in children. If a medial pin is used, the elbow should not be hyperflexed during its insertion.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2001

Increased Body Weight and Decreased Radial Cross‐Sectional Dimensions in Girls with Forearm Fractures

David L. Skaggs; M. Luiza Loro; Pisit Pitukcheewanont; Vernon T. Tolo; Vicente Gilsanz

A large number of children sustain fractures after relatively minor trauma and several investigators have associated these fractures to a deficient accumulation of bone during growth. This study was conducted to better characterize the skeletal phenotype associated with low‐energy impact fractures of the forearm in girls. The densities of cancellous, cortical, and integral bone and the cross‐sectional area were measured in the radius of 100 healthy white girls (aged 4‐15 years) using computed tomography (CT); 50 girls had never fractured and 50 girls had sustained a forearm fracture within the previous month. Fractured and nonfractured groups were matched for age, height, weight, and Tanner stage of sexual development. Compared with controls, girls with fractures had, on average, 8% smaller cross‐sectional area at the distal radius (1.82 ± 0.50 cm2 vs. 1.97 ± 0.42 cm2; p < 0.0001) but similar cancellous, integral, and cortical bone densities. Neither radial length nor the amount of fat or muscle at the midshaft of the radius differed between girls with and without fractures. Both study subjects and matched controls were overweight. Although mean height was at the 50th percentile, mean weight was at the 90th percentile for age‐adjusted normal values. Girls who sustain forearm fractures after minor trauma have small cross‐sectional dimensions of the radius and tend to be overweight. The smaller cross‐sectional area confers a biomechanical disadvantage that, coupled with the greater body weight, increases the vulnerability to fracture after a fall.


Spine | 2000

Complications of posterior iliac crest bone grafting in spine surgery in children.

David L. Skaggs; Michael A. Samuelson; Julie M. Hale; Robert M. Kay; Vernon T. Tolo

Study Design. The perioperative and postoperative complications associated with harvesting posterior iliac crest bone graft in children were reviewed. A retrospective study was performed and a questionnaire interview conducted. Objectives. To determine the morbidity associated with posterior iliac crest bone graft in children. Summary of Background Data. Iliac crest bone is commonly used as a source of bone graft in spine surgery. Although there are multiple reports of complications in adults, there are no reports in children. Methods. A retrospective chart review was performed of 214 consecutive children who underwent spinal fusion with posterior iliac crest bone graft from 1990 through 1996. An interview was conducted of 87 patients with normal mental status, predominantly those with idiopathic scoliosis with a minimum of 2 years’ follow-up (mean, 55 months). Results. The review showed one (0.5%) instance of arterial injury in the sciatic notch. Two (1%) patients had infections, both of which resolved with a single irrigation and débridement. There was one documented instance of sacroiliac penetration that did not cause clinical problems. The chart review showed three (1.4%) instances of continued pain and one (0.5%) of numbness. By contrast to the few reports of pain in the chart review, responses to an interview of 87 patients showed 21 (24%) children reporting pain at the iliac crest site, with 13 (15%) reporting problems with daily activities. The self-reported pain, on a scale of 1 to 10, ranged from 1 to 10 with a mean of 4. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS) were taken by eight (9%) children for pain at the bone graft site. Five (6%) reported skin irritation, and 18 (20%) mentioned numbness surrounding the scar. Conclusion. The perioperative rate of complications in iliac crest bone grafting in children is low (2%). The complication of pain (24%) and pain that is severe enough to interfere with daily activity (15%) is significant at a mean follow-up of more than 4 years. The true extent of pain and numbness after posterior iliac crest bone grafting in children was severely underreported in the medical records and may be underrecognized.


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 1999

Secondary fractures associated with external fixation in pediatric femur fractures.

David L. Skaggs; Arabella I. Leet; Michelle D. Money; Brian A. Shaw; Julia M. Hale; Vernon T. Tolo

Sixty-six femur fractures sustained by children ages 4-14 years and treated with external fixation were reviewed retrospectively to assess factors influencing the incidence of refracture. The total rate of secondary fracture was 12% (eight patients) including five recurrent fractures at the original fracture site and three fractures through the pin sites. After removal of the external fixator, five patients refractured at the original fracture site and one patient fractured through a pin tract. Two patients fractured at pin sites while the fixator was still in place. Multivariate linear-regression analysis showed no correlation between the incidence of refracture and fracture pattern, percentage of bone fragment contact after fixator application, type of external fixator, or dynamization. A statistically significant association (p < 0.05) was found between the number of cortices demonstrating bridging callus [on both anteroposterior (AP) and lateral views] at the time of fixator removal and the rate of refracture. Fractures showing fewer than three cortices of bridging callus had a three (33%) in nine rate of refracture, whereas fractures with three or four cortices of bridging callus had a two (4%) of 57 rate of refracture.


Spine | 2007

Management of infection after instrumented posterior spine fusion in pediatric scoliosis.

Christine A. Ho; David L. Skaggs; Jennifer M. Weiss; Vernon T. Tolo

Study Design. Case series retrospective review. Objective. To identify what factors predict successful eradication of infection after I&D of an infected posterior spinal fusion with instrumentation. Summary of Background Data. The treatment of infection of instrumented spine fusions in children has few clear guidelines in the literature. Methods. The medical records of patients who required a surgical irrigation and debridement (I&D) for infection after posterior spinal fusion and instrumentation for scoliosis from 1995 to 2002 were retrospectively reviewed. Results. Fifty-three patients were identified with the following underlying diagnoses: 21 patients (40%) idiopathic scoliosis, 10 patients (23%) cerebral palsy, 3 patients (6%) spina bifida, 1 patient (2%) congenital scoliosis, and 17 patients (32%) other. There were 31 patients (58%) with surgery <6 months from initial fusion, and 22 (42%) patients >6 months. Of the 43 patients with implant retained at the time of the first I&D, 20 patients required a second I&D (47%). Of the 10 patients with complete implant removal, 2 patients required a second I&D (20%). Coagulase-negative Staphylococcus was the most prevalent organism, growing in 25 (47%) of the cultures. Of patients with idiopathic scoliosis, 8 of 21 (38%) required a second I&D; of the patients with other diagnoses, 14 of 32 (44%) required a second I&D, which was not a significant difference (P > 0.05). Conclusion. To the best of our knowledge, this is the largest reported series of spinal implant infections. When children with an infection after posterior spinal fusion with instrumentation undergo irrigation and debridement, there is a nearly 50% chance that the infection will remain if all spinal implants are not removed. As nearly 50% of the infections were caused by coagulase-negative Staphylococcus, we recommend that prophylactic antibiotic coverage for this organism is used at the time of the initial spinal fusion.


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 2004

Effect of surgical delay on perioperative complications and need for open reduction in supracondylar humerus fractures in children.

Neeraj Gupta; Robert M. Kay; Kellie Leitch; J. Dominic Femino; Vernon T. Tolo; David L. Skaggs

This retrospective study examined whether a delay of greater than 12 hours is associated with an increased risk of perioperative complications in the operative treatment of supracondylar humerus fractures in children. Of 150 consecutive children with supracondylar fractures, 50 underwent surgery in less than 12 hours and 100 underwent surgery greater than 12 hours after injury. There was no significant difference between groups in rate of open reduction (P = 0.55), pin tract infection (P = 1.0), iatrogenic nerve injury (P = 1.0), vascular complication (P = 0.33), or compartment syndrome (P = 1.0), including when Gartland type III fractures were analyzed independently. There was no iatrogenic nerve injury, no compartment syndrome, and one pin tract infection in 150 patients. The study confirms previous retrospective studies finding no significant difference in perioperative complications or rate of open reduction in children undergoing early versus delayed surgical treatment of supracondylar humerus fractures.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1990

Vascularized fibular grafts in the treatment of congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia.

Andrew J. Weiland; A.-P. C. Weiss; J. R. Moore; Vernon T. Tolo

Free vascularized fibular bone grafts were used in nineteen children, seen consecutively, who had congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia. The average age was 5.1 years (range, 1.4 to 11.4 years). Sixteen of the patients had been treated with electrical stimulation for at least one year, and the tibia had not united. All but four patients had had at least one previous operative procedure. At an average follow-up of 6.3 years (range, 2.0 to 11.0 years), eighteen (95 per cent) of the nineteen pseudarthroses had healed. The leg-length discrepancy averaged 1.6 centimeters (range, 0 to 4.0 centimeters), but ten tibiae had residual or progressive valgus or anteroposterior malalignment despite bracing. There was minimum morbidity at the donor site.


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 1983

External skeletal fixation in children's fractures.

Vernon T. Tolo

Fourteen children with acute fractures, mostly open fractures, were treated with Hoffmann external fixation as a part of their fracture care. Thirteen fractures involved the tibia and one the femur. The average follow-up of these children was 17 months. The Hoffmann device was used for 6 to 20 weeks with an average of 11 weeks. One-half of the children had purulent drainage at some time during their treatment although no chronic infections resulted. Fracture union was present after 12 to 52 weeks with a median of 17 weeks. Three refractures occurred after apparent union. The only final angular deformity was in one patient with 6° of varus. Three patients had leg length discrepancies of 2 cm or more. Four patients had overgrowth of the injured limb of 1.0 to 3.0 cm. Range of motion was not permanently impaired by the Hoffmann device. Use of the Hoffmann device for external skeletal fixation is recommended in children with open fractures with skin loss or burns, in children with head injury with resultant increased motor tone, and in polytrauma patients to facilitate patient care and transport for diagnostic and therapeutic procedures.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2006

Treatment of multidirectionally unstable supracondylar humeral fractures in children. A modified Gartland type-IV fracture.

K.K. Leitch; Robert M. Kay; J.D. Femino; Vernon T. Tolo; S.K. Storer; David L. Skaggs

BACKGROUND There is an uncommon subset of supracondylar humeral fractures in children that are so unstable they can displace into both flexion and extension. The purposes of this study were to describe this subset of supracondylar fractures and to report a new technique of closed reduction and percutaneous pinning for their treatment. METHODS In a retrospective review of 297 consecutive displaced supracondylar humeral fractures in children treated operatively at our institution, we identified nine that were completely unstable with documented displacement into both flexion and extension as seen on fluoroscopic examination with the patient under anesthesia. We used a new technique for closed reduction and fixation of these fractures, and then we assessed fracture-healing and complications from the injury and treatment. RESULTS All nine fractures were treated satisfactorily with closed reduction and percutaneous pinning. The complication rate associated with these unstable fractures was no higher than that associated with the 288 more stable fractures. Seven of the nine fractures were stabilized with lateral entry pin placement, and two fractures were stabilized with crossed medial and lateral pins. None of the patients had a nonunion, cubitus varus, malunion, additional surgery, or loss of motion. CONCLUSIONS In rare supracondylar fractures in children, multidirectional instability results in displacement into flexion and/or extension. This fracture can be classified as type IV according to the Gartland system, as it is less stable than a Gartland type-III extension supracondylar fracture. These fractures can be treated successfully with a new technique of closed reduction and percutaneous pinning, thus avoiding open reduction.


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 1999

The effects of fixed and articulated ankle-foot orthoses on gait patterns in subjects with cerebral palsy.

Susan A. Rethlefsen; Robert M. Kay; Sandra W. Dennis; Micah Forstein; Vernon T. Tolo

Twenty-one subjects with spastic diplegic cerebral palsy were studied to quantify the effects of fixed and articulated ankle-foot orthoses (AFOs) on gait and delineate criteria for their use. Children underwent gait analysis under three conditions, fixed AFOs (FAFOs), articulated AFOs (AAFOs), and shoes alone. Greater dorsiflexion occurred at initial contact with both FAFOs and AAFOs than shoes alone. Dorsiflexion at terminal stance was greatest in AAFOs. Plantarflexor power generation at preswing was preserved in AAFOs. No differences were found in knee position during stance. Knee-extensor strength was positively related to knee extension during stance. No relationships were found between dorsiflexion range of motion, calf spasticity and strength, and peak dorsiflexion during stance. AAFOs are appropriate for subjects with varying degrees of calf spasticity, as long as adequate passive range of motion is available. These findings can be applied primarily to children who do not have a preexisting tendency to crouch.

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David L. Skaggs

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Robert M. Kay

University of Southern California

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Richard A. K. Reynolds

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Susan A. Rethlefsen

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Lindsay M. Andras

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Sandra W. Dennis

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Paul D. Choi

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Andrew J. Weiland

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Austin E. Sanders

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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