Get them moving now: Early mobilisation for minimally displaced radial head fractures
Date First Published:
July 21, 2005
Last Updated:
July 21, 2005
Report by:
Richard Body, Clinical Research Fellow (Manchester Royal Infirmary)
Three-Part Question:
In [patients with minimally displaced isolated radial head fractures] does [early mobilisation or conventional immobilisation] lead to [superior functional outcome]?
Clinical Scenario:
A thirty year-old lady has fallen onto her outstretched hand and sustained a radial head fracture, which is virtually undisplaced. Knowing that prolonged immobilisation is likely to lead to poor functional outcome, you wonder whether there is any evidence for immediate mobilisation.
Search Strategy:
OVID Medline 1966 - 2005 July Week 2
OVID Embase 1980 - 2005 Week 29
The Cochrane Library 2005 Issue 2
OVID Embase 1980 - 2005 Week 29
The Cochrane Library 2005 Issue 2
Search Details:
Medline and Embase:
(((exp Elbow/ OR exp Radius/ OR exp Elbow Joint/) AND (exp Fractures, Closed/ OR exp Fractures/)) OR radial head.mp. OR exp Radius Fractures/) AND (exp Early Ambulation/ OR mobilis$ OR mobiliz$ OR exp Immobilization/ OR splint$.mp.)
Cochrane:
radial head
(((exp Elbow/ OR exp Radius/ OR exp Elbow Joint/) AND (exp Fractures, Closed/ OR exp Fractures/)) OR radial head.mp. OR exp Radius Fractures/) AND (exp Early Ambulation/ OR mobilis$ OR mobiliz$ OR exp Immobilization/ OR splint$.mp.)
Cochrane:
radial head
Outcome:
Altogether, 132 papers were identified using Medline, 56 using Embase and 49 using Cochrane. One paper, identified in all three databases, was relevant to the three-part question.
Relevant Paper(s):
| Study Title | Patient Group | Study type (level of evidence) | Outcomes | Key results | Study Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early mobilisation for minimally displaced radial head fractures is desirable: A prospective randomised study of two protocols Liow RYL; Creagn A; Nanda R; Montgomery RJ 2002 United Kingdom | 60 consecutive patients referred to fracture clinic with minimally displaced radial head fractures. Two groups of 30 patients, starting supervised exercise programmes 24 hours and 5 days after injury, respectively. The delayed mobilisation group were treated with broad arm sling for the first five days. Assessments by an independent, blinded observer. |
Prospective comparative clinical trial | Pain (visual analogue scale) | Significantly less in mobilisation group at 1 week (p=0.002). Similar pain scores at 4 and 12 weeks | Not truly randomised: 'random' allocation to different fracture clinics only (treated according to consultant preference). More Mason II (displaced) fractures in delayed mobilisation group (57% vs. 37%, p=0.12). Discrepancy between text and tables for p values regarding Morrey score |
| Range of motion (Morrey scale, measured with goniometer) | Better flexion (112 v. 98 degrees, p=0.0004) and supination (58 v 47 degrees, p=0.0022) in mobilisation group at 1 week. Similar at 4 and 12 weeks | ||||
| Elbow strength (measured with dynamometer) | Stronger in mobilisation group at 1 week (p=0.035); no difference at 4 and 12 weeks | ||||
| Morrey score of elbow function | Higher in mobilisation group at week 1 (54.4 v. 43.5, p<0.05). Similar at 4 and 12 weeks | ||||
| Radiographic assessment | All fractures united, no displacements observed |
Author Commentary:
Only one study has compared early mobilisation with conventional immobilisation with broad arm sling or collar and cuff for radial head fractures. This study included patients with both displaced and undisplaced radial head fractures.
The findings suggest that both approaches lead to similar long term outcomes but that early mobilisation may enable patients to obtain better function early after injury with quicker resolution of pain.
The findings suggest that both approaches lead to similar long term outcomes but that early mobilisation may enable patients to obtain better function early after injury with quicker resolution of pain.
Bottom Line:
Treatment of isolated undisplaced radial head fractures by early mobilisation is safe and may lead to quicker functional recovery.
Level of Evidence:
Level 3: Small numbers of small studies or great heterogeneity or very different population
References:
- Liow RYL; Creagn A; Nanda R; Montgomery RJ. Early mobilisation for minimally displaced radial head fractures is desirable: A prospective randomised study of two protocols
