Hi,
My 6 year old son began limping about march 06. His pediatrician suggested he go for a consult in April 06 with an Ortho Surgeon. Both doc's took x-rays. The Ortho did some hip rotational exams and watched him walk and run. The x-rays came back normal. He said he didn't see anything wrong with my son's hips other than they were steeply angled more than a kid his age. But due to the continued limp and pain, he suggested an MRI to confirm if it was Perthes or something else he also may not see. Originally we thought my son may have had a case of the "I don't want to go to school blues." But after the Ortho checked him out and did the rotations on his leg, he said my son was not faking it and it was not possible to fake the reactions he was getting from turning his hip this way and that way. So I felt guilty after this but I am still not convinced this is what is going on, due to all the research I have seen on this condition stating this condition is seen in X-rays. His x-rays show nothing! His ortho is really thinking it is Perthes. I haven't heard of anyone having to go beyond just a normal x-ray to diagnose this. I am trying to figure out if we may have possibly caught it early enough that it won't show on x-rays yet or if an MRI is warranted quite yet. By all means, he is having issue's whatever it may be, but are there other tests first we could do? If he needs the MRI, I will have it done for him. My question is has anyone had to go beyond just a normal x-ray to have Perthes diagnosed? Were the x-rays originally normal and the doc decided to do an MRI and that was what found the Perthes? I have also read kids who are smaller than average are more at risk. Is this true?
Thank you and sorry for the length. I am just really curious as to the x-rays vs MRI. I appreciate any help you can give me. H
