Pre-hospital use of a traction splint for femoral shaft and lower leg fractures in the same limb
Date First Published:
July 7, 2003
Last Updated:
September 5, 2003
Report by:
Eleanor Thomas, Paramedic (Mersey Regional Ambulance Service NHS Trust)
Search checked by:
tbc, Mersey Regional Ambulance Service NHS Trust
Three-Part Question:
In [the pre-hospital patient with a mid-shaft femur fracture and a lower leg fracture on the same limb] is [a traction splint] suitable for [immobilisation]?
Clinical Scenario:
Ambulance is called to an RTA involving a motor cyclist who has sustained upper and lower leg fractures on the same limb. You wonder whether his leg be immobilised using a traction splint.
Search Strategy:
Medline 1966-07/03 using the PubMed interface.
Search Details:
leg injuries (MeSH term) AND (traction splint* OR traction splintage OR traction splinting) AND (immobilisation OR immobilization) LIMIT to human AND English
Outcome:
Produced 4 papers, of which one was not relevant and the remaining 3 were potentially relevant. On further inspection these were also found to be irrelevant.
Author Commentary:
None of these papers directly address the specific issue of use of traction splints on upper and lower leg fractures.
Bottom Line:
There is no evidence to support the use of traction splints on lower limbs with both femoral and tibial/fibular fractures.
