European Journal of Trauma

, Volume 31, Issue 3, pp 278–279 | Cite as

Fracture or Variation in Distal Phalanx of the First Toe

  • Hans–Joachim Kirlum
  • Karl Schneider
  • Hans–Georg Dietz
Case Study
  • 35 Downloads

Abstract

Background:

Variations of the epiphyseal ossification of short tubular bones were repeatedly mistaken for fractures.

Case Study:

The case of an 11–year-old male patient after a minor trauma is presented. An extra ossification center at the epiphysis of the distal phalanx of the first toe was diagnosed as a fracture and treated appropriately. The recovery was very fast, about 4 days. 3 years later the extra ossification center was still visible and a parted epiphysis of the proximal phalanx appeared again like a fracture, but with no clinical symptoms in that region. This time after a minor trauma, there was no treatment and the patient was free of symptoms after 1 week.

Conclusion:

The variation range of the ossification centers of the first toe is wide. In minor trauma X–ray findings should correlate exactly with the symptoms not to overdiagnose toe fractures.

Key Words

Epiphyseal fracture Pediatric Normal variant Ossification center 

Copyright information

© Urban & Vogel München 2005

Authors and Affiliations

  • Hans–Joachim Kirlum
    • 1
    • 3
  • Karl Schneider
    • 2
  • Hans–Georg Dietz
    • 1
  1. 1.Department of Pediatric SurgeryDr. von Hauner Children’s Hospital, Ludwig Maximilians UniversityMunichGermany
  2. 2.Department of Pediatric RadiologyDr. von Hauner Children’s Hospital, Ludwig Maximilians UniversityMunichGermany
  3. 3.Kinderchirurgische KlinikDr. von Haunersches Kinderspital Ludwig-Maximilians-UniversitätMünchenGermany

Personalised recommendations