Megan E. Johnson, M.D., Appointed Program Director for Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery Fellowship

Megan E. Johnson, M.D., Appointed Program Director for Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery Fellowship

We are honored to announce the appointment of Megan E. Johnson, M.D., as program director for the Dorothy & Bryant Edwards Fellowship in Pediatric Orthopedics and Scoliosis at Scottish Rite for Children. The Edwards fellowship is one of the oldest and largest fellowships in the country and has an alumni of nearly 200 surgeons.  
 
With this new appointment, Dr. Johnson will be responsible for attracting outstanding candidates from diverse backgrounds and training them to be skilled clinicians and surgeons. Dr. Johnson will ensure ongoing maintenance of a high-quality educational curriculum for our fellows and provide leadership and direction to our orthopedic faculty who take part in education. She will have a key role in ensuring our curriculum is undergoing needed innovation through regular program evaluation and quality improvement.
 
Dr. Johnson received her medical degree and completed residency training at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. She completed her pediatric orthopedic fellowship at Scottish Rite for Children in 2015, and following her fellowship, she returned to Vanderbilt University Medical Center. She joined the Scottish Rite for Children staff in 2020 as a pediatric orthopedic surgeon. Her clinical practice focuses on spine deformity in the pediatric population. She also treats patients with spina bifida, not only for their spine conditions but also for lower extremity issues. Dr. Johnson also serves as the Medical Director of Ambulatory Care and is an assistant professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at UT Southwestern Medical Center. 
 
“Dr. Johnson is an excellent clinician in the outpatient, inpatient and surgical setting and is an extremely talented surgeon who takes on both the straightforward as well as the complex deformities,” says Chief of Staff Daniel J. Sucato, M.D., M.S. “Not only is she a great leader, but she also has a natural ability to educate and is one of the favorites of our fellows to work with in the operating room and clinics.”
 
Dr. Johnson succeeds Dr. Sucato, who has served as program director of the Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery Fellowship program for the past 10 years. Dr. Sucato will remain Chief of Staff of Scottish Rite for Children as well as the director of Scottish Rite for Children’s Center for Excellence in Spine.

Get to Know our Staff: Judy Sneed, Center for Dyslexia

Get to Know our Staff: Judy Sneed, Center for Dyslexia

What is your job title/your role at Scottish Rite for Children? 
I am a department assistant within the Luke Waites Center for Dyslexia and Learning Disorders.

What do you do on a daily basis or what sort of duties do you have at work?
My duties include handling patient check-ins, managing the digital platform for center applications, monitoring the approved patient file process and phone coverage.

What was your first job? What path did you take to get here or what led you to Scottish Rite? How long have you worked here?
My first job was working for Cigna Healthcare filing medical records as a teenager. My dad helped me get the job.

The path that led me Scottish Rite was after I worked in Student Discipline at a local high school. This gave me a unique perspective on how unchecked academic learning disorders affected older children daily in an educational environment. A friend reached out that had been recently hired within the department regarding an opportunity to join the center, and the rest is history. I will have worked here for three years in January 2024.

What do you enjoy most about Scottish Rite?
I enjoy assisting parents, guardians and their children with navigating our evaluation process. I am here to listen to their stories regarding their fears and anxiety about their children’s educational future and see them realizing there is help and hope to help further their children’s academic success.

Tell us something about your job that others might not already know?
I am also certified to conduct vision and hearing screening.

Where is the most interesting place you’ve been?
In 2022, I was able to spend 12 amazing days in Australia visiting Sydney, Melbourne and Port Douglas (where the Great Barrier Reef is located). More destinations soon to come.

If you could only eat one meal for the rest of your life, what would it be?
Some kind of potato meal. If anyone knows me personally, I have loved french fries or any kind of potatoes for as long as I can remember, except for yams or sweet potatoes. Not a fan!

If you could go back in time, what year would you travel to?

The late ‘80s, 1989 – 1990. I had just completed high school and was wide-eyed about my future and was just about to meet someone that would make a tremendous impact on my life then and now.

What three items would you take with you on a deserted island?
I hate making assumptions, however, assuming there would be no electricity, I guess my Bible, some seeds and some fabric. No one in their right mind would be anywhere without food or clothing, plus if I was alone, what an amazing book to let me know I really wasn’t and to provide me with hope of a change in my situation.

What’s one fun fact about yourself?
I worked to replace an engine fan assembly on a classic convertible truck I once owned. Go YouTube University!

Progression from “Pop” Back to Pitching

Progression from “Pop” Back to Pitching

A young baseball player hears a pop and immediately feels pain in his throwing elbow while playing club baseball. At his first visit to Scottish Rite for Children’s Fracture Clinic, Parker and his family were told that surgery was necessary to reattach a separated piece of bone in his elbow. That was tough news for this young pitcher nearing his 12th birthday.

A Note About Sport-Related Overuse Injuries in the Elbow in Baseball

Though a completely displaced fracture in this area is uncommon, pain and injury on the middle side of the elbow is common in young throwers. There are immense stresses placed on the elbow during throwing.

Many pitchers and others perform many throws during practice, private training and year-round games and tournaments, and the damage continues and worsens. For many young athletes, early recognition and rest can prevent the condition from worsening to the point of an acute injury, like a medial epicondyle avulsion fracture, that needs surgery. Learn more about preventing elbow overuse injuries in young athletes in this article, Injury Prevention Tips for Young Baseball Players and Parents.

“This area of the elbow is weak in young throwing athletes around Parker’s age, he was 11 at the time of this injury,” occupational therapist Savana Ashton says. The area is an epiphysis, a growth center, where the bone fragment is connected to the humerus by cartilage that will become bone when growth is complete. With or without a history of overuse, a sudden and forceful injury causes the muscle tendon attached to the fragment to pull it off the humerus completely, this is called an avulsion fracture. Like Parker, an athlete often describes hearing a “pop” and instantly feeling severe pain with this injury.

Parker was in good hands. Pediatric hand surgeon, Chris Stutz, M.D., performed the ORIF surgery where he used a screw to reattach the piece of bone. The procedure is called an open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) of the medial epicondyle. After surgery to secure the bone fragment back in place, patients require intensive rehabilitation to return to activities and sports that are meaningful to them. In occupational therapy (OT), Ashton provided many therapeutic interventions including skin care and scar management as well as exercises to regain motion in the elbow and strength in the entire arm.

“From the beginning of Parker’s journey, he was eager to return to baseball, so a strategic path through postsurgical rehabilitation including safely reintroducing throwing was critical,” Ashton says. “Once Dr. Stutz cleared him for throwing, I advanced Parker’s plan to include evidence-based throwing programs, which include general baseball strengthening exercises and a multiphase guide to gradually return-to-pitching.”

Similar to other young athletes recovering from a serious sport-related injury, Parker was ready to be discharged from formal rehabilitation, but he was not quite ready to return to full activity, including baseball. In September, Parker transitioned from OT to the Bridge Program, a group training option offered by our Therapy Services team at Scottish Rite for Children. The program provides athletes like Parker a safe “bridge” to maintain progress made in therapy and continue strengthening in the previously injured area. Simultaneously, the coaches emphasize proper body mechanics and total body strength and conditioning, which will likely help reduce the risk of reinjury. “We were grateful Scottish Rite had an environment for him to continue his recovery,” Parker’s mom, Michele, says. She has entrusted Scottish Rite to care for several of her children now.

The program is not baseball-specific, but it is beneficial for baseball players and many others. Certified strength and conditioning coach Justin Haser, M.S., CSCS, says, “The kids that consistently come in, give a good effort and are coachable see great improvements in their movement economy and improvements in their overall strength outputs.” When athletes enroll in the Bridge Program or Athlete Development Program, they can attend up to three times each week.

In pediatric orthopedics, follow-up visits are particularly important when a growth area was involved in the treatment. Complications with this treatment are rare, but monitoring periodically and confirming recovery is on the right path ensures there won’t be surprises later.

Parker is now 13 and has been happily back on the mound and hitting home runs. “Parker is thrilled to be back playing baseball after his full recovery from surgery,” Michele says. To help other young throwers like himself have a safe season, Parker helped us create instructions for evidence-based exercises for all throwers. These are designed to be performed before practice or a game and can help to reduce elbow injuries.

Download the Thrower’s Program PDF (English | Spanish)

Prenatal Care for Clubfoot – What Expecting Moms Need to Know

Prenatal Care for Clubfoot – What Expecting Moms Need to Know

Discovering that your unborn child appears to have a physical difference during an ultrasound can be scary. The news is often unexpected and can lead to thousands of questions about how it will affect your baby. One thing that is commonly identified during the anatomy ultrasound scans is clubfoot, a condition that causes one or both feet to turn inward and downward. While the condition does require treatment, it often can be corrected without surgical intervention.

Our team in the Center for Excellence in Foot led by Anthony I. Riccio, M.D., meets with parents whose babies are diagnosed with clubfoot prenatally and begins treating these children quickly after they are born, beginning interventions within one to two weeks of birth. Learn more about what to expect during the clubfoot treatment process below.

What is clubfoot?

Clubfoot is a congenital (from birth) disorder in which the foot points down instead of straight and turns in, pointing toward the opposite leg. Clubfoot is one of the most common pediatric musculoskeletal conditions that requires treatment by a pediatric orthopedic surgeon.

A clubfoot is not a normal foot that is just twisted and turned into an abnormal position. The outward deformity is created by structural differences inside the foot. The method of treatment for clubfoot cannot alter the structural differences inside the foot. The treatment method takes the structurally abnormal foot that is in an abnormal position and puts it into a series of casts, which slowly turns the foot until it is in a normal position.

If left untreated, clubfoot will make shoe wear problematic and can lead to serious problems, severely limiting activities and even causing difficulty walking.

Prenatal Clubfoot Care: 20 weeks to 40 weeks gestation

Clubfoot can be diagnosed in unborn babies during the mother’s 20-week ultrasound in which the obstetrician or maternal fetal medicine physician reviews anatomy. During this ultrasound, if one or both feet appear to be abnormal, the doctor will refer the mother to visit with an orthopedic specialist to discuss treatment options.

The first appointment with our clubfoot expert Anthony I. Riccio, M.D., consists of a one-on-one conversation about clubfoot and how it is treated. In this appointment, Riccio answers questions that parents have about the condition and educates them on what to expect. This can greatly help a family feel less anxious about the future of their baby and assuage fears about any future disability.

Newborn Clubfoot Care: 1 to 2 weeks old to 2 months old

Riccio encourages families to spend a few days at home enjoying their newborn and then calling Scottish Rite for Children for an evaluation. Ideally, treatment for clubfoot will begin with the first couple of weeks of the baby’s life.

Typical treatment for clubfoot in newborns consists of the Ponseti method, which uses a series of casts and then braces to correct a baby’s clubfoot and prevent its recurrence. In newborns, the first step is to determine the severity of the condition and begin casting.

In serial casting, a cast is applied to the foot or feet once a week for three to five weeks. This brings the foot from upside down and turned inward position to a right side up and turned outward position. In some cases, a simple procedure under local anesthetic is performed to release tightness in the Achilles tendon and bring the foot into a normal position. After three to five weeks of progressive casting, a final cast is applied to hold the foot in the normal position for three weeks.

Infant Clubfoot Care: 2 months old to 7 to 12-months-old

After serial casting is completed, the next phase in clubfoot treatment is bracing to maintain the correction that was achieved through casting. Babies will wear a brace called a boot and bar brace consisting of soft silicone lined shoes with soft suede straps. These shoes are connected to each other by a bar to keep the feet turned outward.

Scottish Rite follows the protocol set by the International Clubfoot Congress of wearing the brace for 23 hours a day until the baby is beginning to pull up to stand, which usually happens between 7 to 12 months of age. Bracing does not interfere with the baby’s ability to reach developmental milestones, such as rolling over, sitting independently or crawling.

Toddler Clubfoot Care: 7 to 12 months old to 4 years old

After the baby begins pulling up to stand, wearing of the boot and bar brace is transitioned to nighttime only until the child reaches age 4. If bracing is not done in its entirety, the risk of clubfoot recurrence approaches 100%.

According to research at Scottish Rite, 70-80% of children will not require further treatment after the Ponseti method. Unfortunately, because clubfoot is a structural, congenital difference, approximately 20% of children will relapse and need further treatment, despite the medical providers and families doing everything correctly.

While clubfoot care may seem daunting, it is a safe and pain-free process that will give your baby the best outcome and prevent them from having difficulties later in life. Our team in the Center for Excellence in Foot stay with our patients and families every step of the way.

Learn more about clubfoot.