Conservative management of mallet injuries: A national survey of current practice in the UK.

Journal of plastic, reconstructive & aesthetic surgery : JPRAS 2017 Vol.70(7) p. 901-907

Tolkien Z, Potter S, Burr N, Gardiner MD, Blazeby JM, Jain A, Henderson J

Abstract

[INTRODUCTION] Mallet injuries are common and usually treated conservatively. Various systematic reviews have found a lack of evidence regarding the best management, and it is unclear whether this uncertainty is reflected in current UK practice.

[METHODS] An online survey was developed to determine the current practice for the conservative treatment of mallet injury among specialist hand clinicians in the UK, including physiotherapists, occupational therapists and surgeons. Clinician's views of study outcome selection were also explored to improve future trials.

[RESULTS] In total, 336 professionals completed the survey. Inconsistency in overall practice was observed in splint type choice, time to discharge to GP, and assessment of adherence. Greater consistency was observed for recommended duration of continuous immobilisation. Bony injuries were most commonly splinted for 6 weeks (n = 228, 78%) and soft tissue injuries for either 8 weeks (n = 172, 56%) or 6 weeks (n = 119, 39%). Post-immobilisation splinting was frequently recommended, but duration varied between 2 and 10 weeks. The outcome rated as most important by all clinicians was patient satisfaction.

[DISCUSSION] There is overall variation in the current UK conservative management of mallet injuries, and the development of a standardised, evidence-based protocol is required. Clinicians' opinions may be used to develop a core set of outcome measures, which will improve standardisation and comparability of future trials.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
해부 soft tissue scispacy 1
약물 [INTRODUCTION] Mallet injuries scispacy 1
기타 patient scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Conservative Treatment; Finger Injuries; Humans; Immobilization; Occupational Therapy; Orthopedics; Patient Compliance; Patient Discharge; Physical Therapy Specialty; Practice Patterns, Physicians'; Splints; Surgery, Plastic; Surveys and Questionnaires; Thumb; Time Factors; United Kingdom