| Literature DB >> 19340433 |
J de Haan1, N W L Schep, W E Tuinebreijer, P Patka, D den Hartog.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To identify if functional treatment is the best available treatment for simple elbow dislocations. SEARCH STRATEGY: Electronic databases MEDLINE, EMBASE, LILACS, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. SELECTION CRITERIA: Studies were eligible for inclusion if they were trials comparing different techniques for the treatment of simple elbow dislocations. DATA ANALYSIS: Results were expressed as relative risk for dichotomous outcomes and weighted mean difference for continuous outcomes with 95% confidence intervals. MAINEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19340433 PMCID: PMC2797437 DOI: 10.1007/s00402-009-0866-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Orthop Trauma Surg ISSN: 0936-8051 Impact factor: 3.067
Characteristics of the study of Josefsson et al. [6]
| Methods | Randomised controlled trial |
| Participants | 30 consecutive patients included, acute dislocation of the elbow, age ≥16 years, mean age 34.5 years, free from elbow symptoms before injury. Dislocation with fracture excluded except small avulsed fragments <2 × 3 mm, 10 males, 20 females, 18 dislocations left, 12 dislocations right side, 28 posterior or posterolateral and 2 lateral dislocations. Reduction in emergency room. Examination under general anaesthesia after mean of 4 days for examination stability: all elbows medial instability and 16 lateral instability. |
| Interventions | Surgical treatment: |
| Non-surgical treatment: | |
| Outcomes | Follow-up surgical group 31 months (SD = 15), non surgical 24 months (SD = 11). Range of motions at 5, 10 weeks and final examination >1 year: no difference in motion, grip strength, pain, instability |
| Loss of extension >1 year: surgical group 18° (SD = 15) and non-surgical group 10° (SD = 14) | |
| Loss of flexion >1 year: surgical group 1° (SD = 2) and non-surgical group 1° (SD = 2) | |
| For unstable elbows ( | |
| No recurrent dislocations or episodes of instability in both groups | |
| Allocation concealment | Random selection by 30 sealed envelopes, 15 envelopes for surgical treatment and 15 for non-surgical treatment |
Characteristics of the study of Rafai et al. [7]
| Methods | Randomised controlled trial |
| Participants | 50 pure posterior luxations, adults, normal psychological profile, stable after reposition and tested under general anaesthesia, no previous elbow injury. Mean age 25 years (range 16–67 years), 43 males, 7 females, 30 right arm, 20 left arm |
| Interventions | Group I: |
| Group II: | |
| Outcomes | Normal extension: group I 81% and group II 96% (statistically significant difference concluded by authors) |
| Stiffness (=loss of flexion): group I = 19% and group II = 4% (statistically significant difference concluded by authors) | |
| No difference in pain and ossifications | |
| No recurrent dislocations or episodes of instability in both groups | |
| Notes | No |
| Allocation concealment | No details about randomisation |
Characteristics of the study of Royle [5]
| Methods | Retrospective, observational study with 2 comparative groups with mean follow-up of 31 months |
| Participants |
|
| Interventions | Group I: |
| Group II: | |
| Outcomes | Group I excellent (no pain and full extension) or good (minimal pain and extension loss <15°) in 33.3 versus 83% in group II. Results were graded according to Lindscheid and Wheeler |
| No recurrent dislocations | |
| Notes | Age range 11–75 years; thus included children, also associated fractures |
| Posterior dislocation 100% good/excellent result versus | |
| Better outcome if reduction <3 h, 87 versus 53% good/excellent result | |
| Associated fractures | |
| The results of group I versus group II could be confounded by associated fractures, time of reduction and direction of dislocation | |
| Bias | Heterogeneity of groups, children included, confounded by associated fractures, time of reduction and direction of dislocation |
Characteristics of the study of Maripuri et al. [8]
| Methods | Observational retrospective comparative study |
| Participants | 47 simple elbow dislocations in period 2000–2004, mean age 42.5 years, follow-up >2 years, |
| Interventions | Group I: |
| Group II: | |
| Outcomes | Group I: mean score Mayo Elbow Performance Index (MEPI) 83.8 (SEM = 4.2, SD = 18.8). Group II: mean score MEPI 96.5 (SEM = 8.9, SD = 8.9), |
| Group I: mean score Quick Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (DASH) questionnaire 12.8 (SEM = 3.5, SD = 15.7). Group II: mean score DASH 2.7 (SEM = 1.5, SD = 7.0), | |
| Weeks off work: group I mean 6.6 weeks (SEM = 0.64, SD = 2.86); group II 3.2 weeks (SEM = 0.29, SD = 1.36), | |
| 20 patients (of 22) with excellent or good result in group II (depends on MEPI score). 12 patients (of 20) with excellent or good result in group I (depends on MEPI score) | |
| One recurrent dislocation in group I, treated surgically | |
| Notes | Period of immobilisation depended on preference of the treating doctor |
| Allocation concealment | Retrospective study |
| Bias | Selection bias for therapy, attending physician decides, instability, time period, for co-interventions: only 50% of group 1 received physiotherapy at 2 weeks versus 100% of group II |
Characteristics of the study of Riel et al. [9]
| Methods | Observational retrospective comparative study with a historical control group. Mean follow-up 8.2 (SD = 4.5) years |
| Participants | In period 1976–1992 50 simple elbow dislocations, |
| Interventions | Group I: period 1976–1985, |
| Group II: period 1985–1992, | |
| Outcomes | Range of motions, stability and power not different between groups |
| After-treatment period group I 12 (SD = 3) weeks, group II 8 (SD = 3) weeks, disability period group I 16 (SD = 8) weeks, group II 8 (SD = 3) weeks, physical rehabilitation period group I 6 (SD = 3) months, group II 4 (SD = 3) months | |
| Notes | Sex had no influence on result. No recurrent dislocations |
| Allocation concealment | No RCT, observational comparative study with a historical control group |
Characteristics of the study of Protzmann [11]
| Methods | Retrospective observational study with 3 comparative groups, mean follow-up 24.5 months |
| Participants | 49 consecutive patients, military service, 1971–1976, from |
| Interventions | Closed reduction without anaesthesia and group I immobilisation <5 days, |
| Outcomes | Mean extension loss group I = 3°, group II = 11°, group III = 21°. Mean duration disability group I = 6 weeks, group II = 19 weeks, group III = 24 weeks. No SD given |
| Notes | No standard deviations given for outcome measures. No recurrent dislocations and no subjective complaints of instability. 28 patients of the 47 with follow-up had periarticular or ligamentous calcifications |
| Allocation concealment | No RCT, observational study, probably retrospective, comparative study, comparison = post-hoc, immobilisation period was decision of orthopaedic surgeon |
| Bias | Selection bias for therapy, treating doctor decided |
Characteristics of the study of Mehlhoff et al. [10]
| Methods | Observational retrospective comparative study with 3 comparative groups, mean follow-up 34.3 months |
| Participants | 90 consecutive patients, adults, simple dislocations, follow-up >12 months, age >18 years, no associated fractures. Stable after reduction. Period 1978–1985, follow-up from |
| Interventions | Closed reduction, after reduction stability and ROM were tested and gravity stress photos were taken. Group I immobilisation 0–13 days; group II immobilisation 14–24 days; group III immobilisation ≥25 days |
| Outcomes | Ratings extension loss: <5° excellent, <15° good, <30° fair, ≥30° poor |
| Groups divided according to immobilisation period: Group I 0–13 days. Group II 14–24 days, Group III >24 days | |
| Mean flexion contracture = loss of extension: group I: 5.1°; group III 30.1°; loss of flexion: group I 2.7°, group II 5.6°, group III 18.6°. Pain (McGill Pain Questionnaire): group I 80% no pain, group II 45% no pain, group III 10% no pain | |
| Instability non significant. No sample sizes of the groups and no SDs for the outcome measures are presented | |
| No gross instability of the elbow or recurrent dislocation | |
| Notes | No correlation between age, sex or length of follow-up and flexion contracture, pain or instability (Chi-square test, multiple testing) |
| Heterotopic ossification was seen in 55% of the radiographs, but there was no correlation with impairment of motion | |
| Allocation concealment | No RCT, observational study, probably not prospective, comparative study, groups were formed post-hoc |
| Bias | Selection bias, 31 of 84 patients did not participate, selection bias for therapy, treating doctor decided |
Characteristics of the study of Schippinger et al. [12]
| Methods | Retrospective observational study with comparative groups (post hoc). Mean follow-up 61.5 (SD = 22.2) months |
| Participants | 45 simple elbow dislocations, no or minor fractures (<2 × 3 mm), 2 trauma centres, period 1989–1995, |
| Interventions | Closed reduction without general anaesthesia. Check for re-dislocation in various flexion positions. Group I immobilisation <2 weeks; group II immobilisation 2–3 weeks; group III immobilisation >3 weeks |
| Outcomes | Morrey scores and pain group I and II better than group III, but nonsignificant. Number of groups and scores of groups not given |
|
| |
| No recurrent dislocations | |
| Notes | Period of immobilisation was dependent on preference of the orthopaedic surgeon |
| Allocation concealment | No RCT, observational study, retrospective, comparative study, groups were formed post hoc, immobilisation period was decision of orthopaedic surgeon |
Surgical versus non-surgical treatment of simple elbow dislocation
| Outcome | Studies | Participants | Statistical method | Effect estimate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.1 Loss of extension at more than 1 year | 1 | 28 | Mean difference (IV, fixed, 95% CI) | 8.00 [−2.75, 18.75] |
| 1.2 Loss of flexion at more than 1 year | 1 | 28 | Mean difference (IV, fixed, 95% CI) | 0.00 [−1.48, 1.48] |
| 1.3 Loss of extension at 10 weeks | 1 | 28 | Mean difference (IV, fixed, 95% CI) | 11.00 [−4.19, 26.19] |
| 1.4 Loss of flexion at 10 weeks | 1 | 28 | Mean difference (IV, fixed, 95% CI) | 6.00 [−0.11, 12.11] |
| 1.5 Loss of extension at 5 weeks | 1 | 28 | Mean difference (IV, fixed, 95% CI) | 11.00 [−4.93, 26.93] |
| 1.6 Loss of flexion at 5 weeks | 1 | 28 | Mean difference (IV, fixed, 95% CI) | 9.00 [−0.88, 18.88] |
IV inverse variance; CI confidence interval
Functional treatment versus plaster immobilisation
| Outcome | Studies | Participants | Statistical method | Effect estimate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2.1 Percentage of patients with normal extension at 1 year | 1 | 50 | Risk ratio (M-H, fixed, 95% CI) | 1.19 [0.97, 1.46] |
| 2.2 Percentage of patients with normal extension at 3 months | 1 | 50 | Risk ratio (M-H, fixed, 95% CI) | 1.78 [1.23, 2.57] |
| 2.3 Percentage of patients with normal flexion at 1 year | 1 | 50 | Risk ratio (M-H, fixed, 95% CI) | 1.19 [0.97, 1.46] |
| 2.4 Percentage of patients with normal flexion at 3 months | 1 | 50 | Risk ratio (M-H, fixed, 95% CI) | 1.25 [0.99, 1.56] |
| 2.5 Percentage of patients with normal pro- and supination at 1 year | 1 | 50 | Risk ratio (M-H, fixed, 95% CI) | 1.25 [0.99, 1.56] |
| 2.6 Percentage patients with excellent or good results at >2 years | 2 | 74 | Risk ratio (M-H, fixed, 95% CI) | 1.76 [1.19, 2.60] |
| 2.7 Mayo Elbow Performance Index (MEPI) | 1 | 42 | Mean difference (IV, fixed, 95% CI) | 12.70 [3.66, 21.74] |
| 2.8 Quick Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (DASH) | 1 | 42 | Mean difference (IV, fixed, 95% CI) | −10.10 [−17.58, −2.62] |
| 2.9 Weeks off work | 1 | 42 | Mean difference (IV, fixed, 95% CI) | −3.40 [−4.78, −2.02] |
| 2.10 Physiotherapy time (weeks) | 1 | 44 | Mean difference (IV, fixed, 95% CI) | −4.00 [−5.78, −2.22] |
| 2.11 Period disability (weeks) | 1 | 44 | Mean difference (IV, fixed, 95% CI) | −8.00 [−11.71, −4.29] |
| 2.12 After-treatment time (months) | 1 | 44 | Mean difference (IV, fixed, 95% CI) | −2.00 [−3.78, −0.22] |
M-H Mantel-Haenszel statistical method; CI confidence interval; IV inverse variance
Fig. 1Forest plot comparing functional treatment (sling) and plaster immobilisation for the percentage of excellent or good results