Congenital Anomalies
A deforming birth defect has a
devastating psychological impact upon
the child's parents, and has the
potential for life-long impact upon the
physical, psychological and
socioeconomic well-being of the child.
Dr. Bolitho can improve or correct many
of these birth defects. Because timing
of surgery is often an important factor
in improving the prospect for successful
outcome, early consultation should be
sought.
Dr. Bolitho works closely with your
primary care physician in designing a
maximally effective treatment plan for
your child. Commonly, they work in the
context of a multi-disciplinary team.
The family physician and pediatrician
may work together with Dr. Bolitho to
help parents deal rationally with
treatment options.
Malformations of the Ear
Ear malformations can severely affect
a child's self-image, especially if the
condition is allowed to go uncorrected
until school age. The importance of well
formed ears in overall facial esthetics
is reflected in the severe teasing
inflicted by schoolmates on a child with
malformed ears.
As soon as an ear malformation is
identified, Dr. Bolitho should become a
partner with the primary care physician
in planning an approach to
reconstruction. Consultation with the
child's parents will help to plan the
age at which reconstruction should
begin. Usually, reconstruction should be
completed before the child enters
school. Because rib cartilage is
commonly required to form a new ear
framework, definitive reconstruction may
take place at about age 5 or 6 years
when rib growth has been adequate.
Parents should be informed regarding
potential complications of harvesting
rib cartilage. Skin flap techniques are
commonly used to mobilize the skin used
to cover the new ear framework.
The ultimate success of ear
reconstruction depends upon patient
selection, adequate counseling of
parents, surgical skill, and detailed
attention in the intraoperative and
postoperative periods to prevent
complications.
Hemangiomas and Other
Benign Vascular Lesions of the Skin
Hemangiomas and lymphangiomas, the
most common benign tumors of the skin in
newborns, may be present at birth or
appear in the first months after birth.
Some lesions regress and disappear in
the first few months of life. Laser
treatment is often a treatment of choice
for vascular lesions, including
port-wine stain and unregressed
strawberry hemangioma. Careful
evaluation is required before laser
treatment is undertaken.
Pigmented Lesions of the Skin
Pigmented lesions in the newborn are
frequently difficult to interpret
regarding their present or potential
malignancy. Early consultation with Dr.
Bolitho and pathologist initiates the
planning for surgical removal and other
treatment options.
Large congenital nevi pose a
significant risk of early malignancy or
later malignant transformation. Large
and sometimes hairy nevi also are
physically uncomfortable and
psychologically damaging for child and
parents. Surgical excision with is often
a treatment of choice.
Malformations of the Hand
Hand malformations include syndactyly
(webbed fingers), polydactyly (extra
fingers), trigger fingers, crooked
fingers, absent thumb, short fingers and
missing fingers. All congenital hand
malformations should raise suspicion of
associated deformities of other organs
or tissues. Syndactyly, for example, is
frequently a readily visible
manifestation of Poland's syndrome. This
is the congenital absence of chest wall
structures in association with hand
malformation.
Dr. Bolitho can correct many hand
malformations definitively; in other
instances, he can provide some degree of
functional improvement. Consultation
with the patient's parents must stress
the importance of restoring function to
the malformed hand, with the cosmetic
appearance a secondary consideration.
The unique function of the hand
throughout life mandates that function
be restored as fully as possible. The
provision of pinch and grip function
will be essential to many occupations.
Anomalies of the Breast
Congenital breast asymmetry may be a
manifestation of underlying congenital
anomalies. Poland's syndrome, the most
frequent congenital cause of breast
asymmetry, is a syndrome of thoracic
structure deformities, breast asymmetry,
and webbing of the fingers. Treatment of
breast asymmetry due to Poland's
syndrome may include the use of a breast
implant, or the use of the patient's own
tissue to recontruct the breast or chest
wall.
As in the case of other congenital
deformities, Poland's syndrome may be
seen in association with anomalies of
other tissues and organs.
Soft-Tissue Injuries
requiring plastic surgery
Falls, traffic accidents, animal
bites, hot liquids, electrical equipment
and physical abuse all produce injuries
to the soft tissues of children.
Treatment in an emergency department is
often adequate, but failure to provide
appropriate or definitive treatment in
the emergency setting may produce
permanent injury or disfigurement. Dr.
Bolitho emphasizes the importance for
the primary care physician to recognize
when consultation with a plastic surgeon
is indicated for definitive treatment.
Soft-Tissue Injuries of the
Face
Facial injuries require special
attention because of their potential for
permanent disfigurement. Contusions,
lacerations, puncture wounds, tattoos
with debris and especially avulsive
injuries all have the capacity to
permanently disfigure the patient.
Inadequate suturing of even small
lacerations on the face can result in
poor healing and scarring.
Dr. Bolitho stresses that definitive
repair of facial soft-tissue injuries is
best carried out in an operating room
rather than an emergency room, and
preferably by a plastic surgeon. Should
the injuries be complex or severe, Dr.
Bolitho can perform procedures that will
be definitive or will lay the foundation
for later revision surgery.
Injuries to particularly vulnerable
facial features require special
attention. Injuries to the forehead and
eyebrow, eyelids, ears, nose, cheeks and
chin have the most potential to result
in disfigurement. In the case of
injuries to cheek and chin, injuries
also may result in loss of function if
facial nerves or muscles are injured.
Animal Bites
Animal bites can present special
problems. The majority of dog bite
wounds are to the face in children and
are typically contaminated, crushing
type injuries. Vigorous cleaning and
meticulous repair by Dr. Bolitho can
frequently salvage a serious injury.
Snakebite presents the possibility of
envenomation in addition to bite injury.
If the type of snake is unknown,
emergency treatment proceeds with
observation and suspicion of
envenomation. Bites inflicted by
rattlesnakes may result in loss of
normal tissue that requires surgical
removal. Skin grafting or reconstruction
with skin flap techniques may be needed
after healing of the wound.
Burns
Most burns suffered by infants and
young children are hot-liquid scalds.
The immediate concern in scald injury is
estimation of the extent of injury. The
size of the burn must be calculated
differently in infants and children than
in adults, due to inherent differences
in relative size of head to body.
Estimation of the severity of the burn
is dependent upon the temperature of the
scalding liquid, and the amount of time
the skin was exposed to the liquid. Good
emergency management of a superficial
burn should result in healing without
complications. Elements of good medical
management include
-
(1)
evaluation,
-
(2) rinsing
with saline solution and light
cleaning with mild soap-and-water
solution,
-
(3)
debridement of any blisters that
interfere with function, such as
blisters on the eyelids,
-
(4)
instruction to the child's family in
how to care for the burn after the
patient is released from the
hospital, and
-
(5)
examination of the patient by the
treating physician within 2 days
after the first dressing change, to
rule out the possibility of
wound-site infection.
Burns of the ears and hands require
special attention. Even superficially
burned ears may later develop scarring
or deformation. Burned hands can
potentially develop scarring and
contracture that limit function. Dr.
Bolitho is available for consultation
for child with a burn on any site, but
particularly for burns involving the
face and hands.