| Literature DB >> 19838365 |
Ba Petrisor1, Selene Lisson, Sheila Sprague.
Abstract
Extracorporeal shockwave therapy is increasingly used as an adjuvant therapy in the management of nonunions, delayed unions and more recently fresh fractures. This is in an effort to increase union rates or obtain unions when fractures have proven recalcitrant to healing. In this report we have systematically reviewed the English language literature to attempt to determine the potential clinical efficacy of extracorporeal shockwave therapy in fracture management. Of 32 potentially eligible studies identified, 10 were included that assessed the extracorporeal shockwave therapy use for healing nonunions or delayed unions, and one trial was included that assessed its use for acute high-energy fractures. From the included, studies' overall union rates were in favor of extracorporeal shockwave therapy (72% union rate overall for nonunions or delayed unions, and a 46% relative risk reduction in nonunions when it is used for acute high-energy fractures). However, the methodologic quality of included studies was weak and any clinical inferences made from these data should be interpreted with caution. Further research in this area in the form of a large-scale randomized trial is necessary to better answer the question of the effectiveness of extracorporeal shockwave therapy on union rates for both nonunions and acute fractures.Entities:
Keywords: Extracorporeal shockwave therapy; delayed union; fresh fracture; nonunion
Year: 2009 PMID: 19838365 PMCID: PMC2762266 DOI: 10.4103/0019-5413.50851
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Orthop ISSN: 0019-5413 Impact factor: 1.251
Figure 1Flow chart of study process
Study characteristics and outcomes for included studies assessing extracoporeal shockwave therapy on nonunion or delayed union
| Author/Year | Study Design | N Patients | Mean Age | Follow-up | Diagnosis N(%) | Bone | ESWT | Union rate N (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Logan | RCT | 14 | NA | 3 yrs | Delayed Union | Long bones | 3000 impulses EFD or kV not mentioned | No difference |
| Xu, | Retrospective case series | 69 | 38 | 96% Up to 90 months | Atrophic NU: 11 (15.9%) Hypertrophic NU: 58(84.1%) | Femur 22 Tibia 28 Humerus 1 3 Forearm 6 | Femur/tibia: 6000 – 10000 impulses, 28kV anc EFD 0.62mJ/mm2 | Overall: 50 (75.8%) AtrophicNU: 0(0%) Hypertrophic NU: 50 (91%) |
| Humerus/Forearm 3000-4000 impulses, 24kV anc EFD 0.56 mJ/mm2 | ||||||||
| Bara, | Retrospective case series | 81 | Age range 12-89 | 6mths | Delayed union or NU | Tibia (49) Femur (13) Forearm (10) Humerus (5) Other (14) | 1500–3000 impulse 20kv, wave pressui 500 bars within 1 microsecond Forearm: 1500 impulses All other bones: 3000 impulses | Overall: 67/81 (83%) 40/42 healed with DU (95%) 27/39 healed with NU (67%) |
| Biederman, | Retrospective case series | 73 | 42 | 96% 17mths | NU: 57 (78%) Delayed union: 16(22%) Hypertrophic NU: 34(61%) Atrophic NU: 22 (39%) | Long 2bone: 83% | Average 2900 impulses and 23kV | Overall: 32 (56%) AtrophicNU: 11 (50%) Hypertrophic NU: 21 (62%) Delayed union: 11 (93%) |
| Wang | Prospective case series | 72 | 39.4 | 76% 12mths | Hypertrophic NU: 38(52.8%) Atrophic NU: 13 (18%) NU with defect: 21 (29.2%) | Femur: 41 Tibia: 18 Humers: 7 Forearm: | 2000-6000 impulses, 28kV | Overall: 44(80%) Atropic NU: 10(75%) Hypertrophic NU: 25 (80.6%) NU with defect: 6 (81.3%) |
| Schaden | Retrospective case series | 115 | 47.1 | 100% Up to 4 years | NU: 80(70%) Delayed union: 35 (30%) | Feumr: 12 Tibia: 34 Humerus: 5 Forearm: 14 Other: 50 | 1000–12000 impulses, 28kv Tibia/femur 0.4mJ/mm2 Scaphoid: 0.25–0.35mJ/ mm2 | Overall: 87(75.7%) NU: 61 (76.3%) Delayed union: 26 (74.3%) |
| Rompe | Prospective case series | 43 | 39.5 | 100: 9mths | Nonuion | Femur: 24 Tibia: 19 | 3000 impulses 0.6mJ/mm2 | Overall: 31 (72%) |
| Vogel | Retrospective case series | 48 | 38 | 12mths | Nonuion | Femur: 17 Tibia: 19 Other lower extremity: 11 | 3000 impulses 0.6mJ/mm2 | Overall: 29(60.4%) |
| Schleberger | Retrospective case series | 4 | 2 adults 2 pediatrk | NA | Nonunion | Humerus Tibia Metatarsal Tibia/fibula fusion | 2000 impulses, 18kV | Overall: 3(75%) |
| Valchanou | Retrospective case series | 79 | 28 | NA | Nonunion | Femur: 6 Tibia: 10 Humerus: 5 Forearm: 32 Other: 25 | 1000–4000 impulses, 1000-1700 bar | Overall: 70(85.4%) |
ESWT: extracorporeal Shockwave therapy, NU: nonunion, EFD: energy flux density, kV: kilovolt
Sub-group analysis of union rates between atrophic and hypertrophic nonunion, compiled from available data.
| Union | Pooled estimate of union rate |
|---|---|
| Overall | 72% [95%CI 69% – 76%] |
| Atrophic nonunion | 42% [95% Cl 23% – 61%] |
| Hypertrophic nonunion | 78% [95% Cl 70% – 86%] |
Study characteristics for trial involving acute fractures with nonunion event rate given
| Author/ Year | Study Design | N Patients | Mean Age | Follow-up | Diagnosis N(%) | Bone | ESWT | Nonunion event rate N(%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wang | RCT Pseudorandomization Odd and even days | ECSW: 28 Control: 31 | ECSW: 35.5 Control: 35.4 | ECSW: 27/28 (96%) Control: 30/31 (97%) | High energy fracture with bone gap <5mm and non-articular | Femur Tibia | 6000 impulses at 28kV | ECSW: 3/27 (11%) | |
| Control: 6/30 (20%) |
ESWT: extracorporeal Shockwave therapy, ECSW: extracorporeal Shockwave, RCT: randomized controlled trial
Forrest plot of the relative risk of nonunion comparing extracorporeal shockwave and control group in acute high energy fractures, data from Wang et al., 2008
| Study or subgroup | Extracorporeal shockwave events | Control | Risk ratio M-H, Fixed, 95% CI | Risk ratio M-H, Fixed, 95% CI | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Events | Total | Weight | ||||
| Wang | 3 | 27 | 6 | 30 | 100.0% | 0.56 [0.15, 2.01] | |
| Total (95% CI) | 27 | 30 | 100.0% | 0.55 [0.15, 2.01] | |||
| Total events | 3 | 6 | |||||
| Haterogeneity: Not applicable | |||||||
| Test for overall effect: Z = 0.90 ( | |||||||