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Salter–Harris fracture

Abstract

A Salter–Harris fracture is a fracture that involves the epiphyseal plate or growth plate of a bone. It is a common injury found in children, occurring in 15% of childhood long bone fractures.

Types

There are nine types of Salter–Harris fractures; types I to V as described by Robert B Salter and W Robert Harris in 1963, and the rarer types VI to IX which have been added subsequently:

- Type I – transverse fracture through the growth plate (also referred to as the "physis"): 6% incidence

- Type II – A fracture through the growth plate and the metaphysis, sparing the epiphysis: 75% incidence, takes approximately 2–3 weeks or more in the spine to heal.

- Type III – A fracture through growth plate and epiphysis, sparing the metaphysis: 8% incidence

- Type IV – A fracture through all three elements of the bone, the growth plate, metaphysis, and epiphysis: 10% incidence

- Type V – A compression fracture of the growth plate (resulting in a decrease in the perceived space between the epiphysis and metaphysis on x-ray): 1% incidence

- Type VI – Injury to the peripheral portion of the physis and a resultant bony bridge formation which may produce an angular deformity (added in 1969 by Mercer Rang)

- Type VII – Isolated injury of the epiphyseal plate (VII–IX added in 1982 by JA Ogden)

- Type VIII – Isolated injury of the metaphysis with possible impairment of endochondral ossification

- Type IX – Injury of the periosteum which may impair intramembranous ossification

SALTER mnemonic for classification

The mnemonic "SALTER" can be used to help remember the first five types.

IMPORTANT NOTE: This mnemonic requires the reader to imagine the bones as long bones, with the epiphyses at the base.

- I – S = Slip (separated or straight across). Fracture of the cartilage of the physis (growth plate)

- II – A = Above. The fracture lies above the physis, or Away from the joint.

- III – L = Lower. The fracture is below the physis in the epiphysis.

- IV – TE = Through Everything. The fracture is through the metaphysis, physis, and epiphysis.

- V – R = Rammed (crushed). The physis has been crushed.