| Literature DB >> 35915476 |
Robin Larsson1, Lena Nordeman2,3, Christina Blomdahl3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Popularity of rock climbing is steadily increasing. With its inclusion in the Olympic Games this will likely continue. Injuries from rock climbing are also increasing. The most common injury is to the flexor pulley system, consisting of the finger flexors and five annular ligaments (pulleys). Treatment of this injury includes taping of affected fingers, but evaluation of this treatment was previously lacking. The aim of this review was therefore to assess whether taping is associated with better outcomes than non-taping. A secondary aim was to present treatment recommendations or areas for future research.Entities:
Keywords: Conservative treatment; Finger injuries; Ligament injuries; Pulley injuries; Rehabilitation; Rock climbing; Sports medicine; Taping
Year: 2022 PMID: 35915476 PMCID: PMC9344739 DOI: 10.1186/s13102-022-00539-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Sports Sci Med Rehabil ISSN: 2052-1847
Pulley-injury score, closed injuries
| Grade | Injury | Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Pulley strain | Conservative (tape) |
| 2 | Complete rupture of A4 or partial rupture of A2 or A3 | Conservative (tape) |
| 3 | Complete rupture of A2 or A3 | Conservative (thermoplastic ring + tape) |
| 4 | Multiple ruptures (as A2/A3, A2/A3/A4) or single rupture (as A2 or A3) combined with lumbricalis muscle or collateral ligament trauma | Surgical reconstruction |
Modified from Schöffl et al. [11] and used with permission
Fig. 1PRISMA 2020 flow diagram for systematic reviews, including searches of databases and other sources.From Page et al. [20]
Included studies, n = 9 (reported in nine articles and one poster)
| References, country | Study design | Participants | Intervention | Comparison | Outcome measures | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bollen [ | Case report | n = 1 (rock climber with pulley injury and clinical presentation of bowstringing), age 20, male | Taping, base of finger | None | Time to return to sports (RTS); pain; bowstringing | n = 1 could RTS without pain nor loss of function at 4w and 6mo follow up, bowstringing remained unchanged |
| Dykes et al. [ | Randomized crossover trial | n = 10 (uninjured rock climbers); age range 18–22; 10 men, no women | Circular taping; H-taping. Loading of FDS & FDP in open hand & full crimp on “distal phalanx wide” edge | No taping. Loading of FDS & FDP in open hand & full crimp on “distal phalanx wide” edge | Muscle activation of FDS & FDP, measured with EMG | No difference in muscle activation of FDS & FDP between taped & non-taped fingers ( |
| Niegl et al. [ | Crossover trial | n = 11 (uninjured rock climbers); mean age 25; 11 men, no women | Circular taping. Loading of right hand in full crimp on 15 mm edge | No taping. Loading of right hand in full crimp on 15 mm edge | Changes in joint angles of PIP/DIP. Used to deduct force reduction against A2 (%) | 14° less PIP-flexion in taped compared to non-taped finger. 10° less DIP-hyperextension in taped compared to non-taped finger |
| Partner et al. [ | Randomized crossover trial | n = 50 (uninjured rock climbers); age unspecified; 25 men, 25 women | H-taping. Loading of hands in full crimp with Jamar dynamometer | No taping. Loading of hands in full crimp with Jamar dynamometer | Finger strength (MVC), measured with Jamar plus digital dynamometer | No difference in MVC between taped & non-taped fingers ( |
| Schweizer [ | Crossover trial | n = 16 (fingers) on 4 uninjured individuals; 3 men (30, 30 & 58 years of age), 1 woman (30 years of age) | Circular taping (over A2, or distal end of proximal phalange). Loading of dig. 3 & 4 in full crimp on 22 mm edge | No taping. Loading of dig. 3 & 4 in full crimp on 22 mm edge | Bowstringing (mm); force absorbed by taping (N); force of bowstringing (N) | Taping over A2 decreased bowstringing by 0.05 mm (2.8%) ( |
| Schöffl et al. [ | Crossover trial | n = 12 (rock climbers with previous pulley injuries (> 1 year earlier), grade 1–3); mean age 36; 12 men, no women | Circular taping; 8-taping; H-taping. Loading of single finger in full crimp & open hand on 20 mm edge | No taping. Loading of single finger in full crimp & open hand on 20 mm edge | Bowstringing (mm); finger strength (MVC) | Bowstringing without tape 3.77 mm, with 8-taping 3.70 mm, with circular taping 3.59 mm, with H-taping 3.19 mm |
| Schöffl et al. [ | Prospective cohort study | n = 122 (rock climbers with pulley injuries, grade 1–4); mean age 29; 110 men, 12 women | Immobilization (2w), functional training (2-4w) & circular taping (grade 1–2, 3mo) or protective orthosis & circular taping (grade 3, 6mo). Surgery (grade 4) | None | Time to return to sports (RTS); pain | n = 87–88 available to follow up. n = 73 (grade 1–3) could RTS at 3mo with no to minor pain (n = 6 continued taping > 12mo), n = 7 with persistent pain received corticosteroid injections |
| Tufaro et al. [ | Controlled clinical trial | n = 112 (fingers) on 14 pairs of fresh frozen cadaver hands); age range 50–98, sex not specified | H-taping. Loading of single fingertip in full crimp until rupture of A2 (partially torn & intact) | No taping. Loading of single fingertip until rupture of A2 (partially torn & intact) | Force at A2 rupture (N); bowstringing (mm), but only measured for un-taped comparison | No difference between taped & non-taped finger at pulley rupture (torn A2, |
| Warme and Brooks [ | Randomized controlled trial | n = 72 (fingers) on 9 pairs of fresh frozen cadaver hands); age range 20–47; 4 men, 5 women | Circular taping. Loading of single fingertip in full crimp until rupture of A2 | No taping. Loading of single fingertip until rupture of A2 | Force at pulley rupture (N) | No difference between taped & non-taped finger at pulley rupture ( |
*Statistically significant results in bold, A2 second annular ligament/pulley, dig. digitorum manus, DIP distal interphalangeal joint, EMG electromyography, FDP flexor digitorum profundus, FDS flexor digitorum superficialis, mo months, MVC maximal voluntary contraction, N newton/force, NB nota bene, PIP proximal interphalangeal joint, RTS return to sports, SD standard deviation, w weeks
Cochrane scale for clinical relevance, higher scores better, see “Appendix 2” for details
| References, country | Cochrane score |
|---|---|
| Bollen [ | 0/5 |
| Dykes et al. [ | 3/5 |
| Niegl et al. [ | 5/5 |
| Partner et al. [ | 2/5 |
| Schweizer [ | 4/5 |
| Schöffl et al. [ | 5/5 |
| Schöffl et al. [ | 2/5 |
| Schöffl et al. [ | 2/5 |
| Tufaro et al. [ | 0/5 |
| Warme and Brooks [ | 2/5 |
Finger taping methods
| Method | Description | Studies |
|---|---|---|
| Circular taping | 1.3–2.0 cm wide non-elastic tape wrapped 3–4 times around the proximal phalange, either directly above the A2 or slightly distal of the A2/over the distal end of the proximal phalange | Dykes et al. [ |
| 8-taping | tape applied in an 8-shape crossing the PIP-joint on the palmar side | Schöffl et al. [ |
| H-taping | 10 cm long and 1.5 cm wide non-elastic tape cut lengthwise from both sides, leaving 1 cm intact in the middle, taking the shape of an “H”. The two proximal ends are wrapped around the distal part of the proximal phalange, after which the PIP-joint is flexed, then the two distal parts are wrapped around the proximal part of the middle phalange | Dykes et al. [ |
Summary of findings for taping versus no taping, pulley injuries, rock climbers
| Outcomes | Without taping | With taping | Number of participants (studies) | Certainty of the evidence (GRADE) | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pain, after grade 1–3 pulley injuries | N/A | 90–91% of rock climbers reported no to minor pain after three months | 123 (1 cohort study [ | 2/4 (before adjustment) 1/4 (after adjustment) − 0.5 inconsistency − 0.5 imprecision | There is |
| Time to RTS, after grade 1–3 pulley injuries | N/A | 90–91% of rock climbers could RTS after 3 months | 123 (1 cohort study [ | 2/4 (before adjustment) 1/4 (after adjustment) − 0.5 inconsistency − 0.5 imprecision | There is |
| Bowstringing, at proximal phalange, in uninjured individuals & rock climbers with previous grade 1–3 pulley injuries | Bowstringing without tape ranged from 3.45 to 3.77 mm | Bowstringing was 15–22% lower with taping | 16 (2 crossover trials [ | 4/4 (before adjustment) 2.5/4 (after adjustment) − 1 serious risk of bias − 0.5 imprecision | There is |
| 1 rock climber with clinical bowstringing saw no effect of taping | 1 (1 case report [ | ||||
| Shearing forces against A2, in uninjured rock climbers/individuals | N/A | Taping absorbed 11–12% of shearing forces against A2 | 15 (2 crossover trials [ | 4/4 (before adjustment) 2/4 (after adjustment) − 1 serious risk of bias − 0.5 indirectness − 0.5 imprecision | There is |
| Maximum force at pulley rupture, in cadaver hands | Force at pulley rupture ranged from 153 N (50% pre-torn, subjects aged 50 to 98) to 569 N (intact, subjects aged 20 to 47, male) | There was no significant difference with taping | 23 pairs of fresh frozen cadaver hands (1 RCT [ | 4/4 (before adjustment) 1.5/4 (after adjustment) − 0.5 risk of bias − 0.5 inconsistency − 1 serious indirectness − 0.5 imprecision | Taping does not affect forces needed for pulley rupture, |
| MVC, in rock climbers, with previous grade 1–3 pulley injuries | Reported as mean normalized finger strength in percentage of body weight | MVC in full crimp was 13% greater with taping; there was no significant difference for open hand | 12 (1 crossover trial [ | 4/4 (before adjustment) 1/4 (after adjustment) − 2 very serious risk of bias − 0.5 inconsistency − 0.5 imprecision | There is |
| 1 (1 case report [ | |||||
| 1 rock climber with clinical bowstringing saw no decrease in MVC with taping | |||||
| MVC & muscle activation, in uninjured rock climbers | MVC, one hand, full crimp, 24 kg in Jamar dynamometer; muscle activation measured with EMG | There was no significant difference in MVC or muscle activation with taping | 60 (2 randomized crossover trials [ | 4/4 (before adjustment) 3/4 (after adjustment) − 0.5 risk of bias − 0.5 imprecision | There is |
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence, from Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care (EPOC) [30]
4/4, High certainty: This research provides a very good indication of the likely effect. The likelihood that the effect will be substantially different is low
3/4, Moderate certainty: This research provides a good indication of the likely effect. The likelihood that the effect will be substantially different is moderate
2/4, Low certainty: This research provides some indication of the likely effect. However, the likelihood that it will be substantially different is high
1/4, Very low certainty: This research does not provide a reliable indication of the likely effect. The likelihood that the effect will be substantially different is very high
CCT controlled clinical trial, EMG electromyography, GRADE Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation, mm millimetre, MVC maximum voluntary contraction, N Newton, N/A not applicable, RCT randomized controlled trial, RTS return to sports
Fig. 2Bowstringing. NB: For Schweizer we calculated p-values from available mean, SD, sample size
Fig. 3Force (N) at rupture of A2, in cadaver hands. NB: Values for Tufaro et al. are estimated based on visual presentation of data without exact numerical values in original source
| References, country | Are the patients described in detail so that you can decide whether they are comparable to those that you see in your practice?a | Are the interventions and treatment settings described well enough so that you can provide the same for your patients? | Were all clinically relevant outcomes measured and reported? | Is the size of the effect clinically important?b | Are the likely treatment benefits worth the potential harms? | Total score (05) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bollen [ | No | No | No | No | Insufficient information | 0/5 |
| Dykes et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | 3/5 |
| Niegl et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 5/5 |
| Partner et al. [ | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | 2/5 |
| Schweizer [ | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | 4/5 |
| Schöffl et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 5/5 |
| Schöffl et al. [ | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | 2/5 |
| Schöffl et al. [ | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | 2/5 |
| Tufaro et al. [ | No | No | No | No | No | 0/5 |
| Warme and Brooks [ | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | 2/5 |
aStudies on cadavers automatically lost one point due to not being directly comparable to living individuals seen in practice
bA mean difference of < 10% was considered a small effect size; 10–20% medium; and > 20% = big (Cohen [24])