AI Article Synopsis

  • Management of distal radius fractures (DRF) relies on measuring fracture displacement through radiographic methods, but the accuracy of these measurements is questionable.
  • The study aimed to assess the accuracy of two specific measurements—dorsal/volar tilt and ulnar variance—by comparing radiographic results to a more precise technique called radiostereometric analyses (RSA).
  • Results showed that radiographs significantly underestimated fracture-induced deformities, suggesting that current clinical assessments may lead to ineffective treatment strategies for DRFs.*

Article Abstract

Background: Management of the distal radius fracture (DRF) is to some extent based on radiographic characterization of fracture displacement. It remains unclear, however, if the measurements used to quantify displacement are accurate.

Purpose: To quantify accuracy of two radiographic measurements: dorsal/volar tilt and fracture compression, measured indirectly as ulnar variance (UV), using radiostereometric analyses (RSA) as reference standard.

Material And Methods: Twenty-one fresh frozen non-fractured human cadaveric forearms (right = 11, left = 10) were thawed and eligible for inclusion. The forearms were mounted on a custom made platform that allowed for controlled forearm rotation, and they underwent two rounds of imaging (both rounds consisted of RSA and radiographs). In round one, the non-fractured forearms were radiographed. In round two, artificial DRF´s with compression and dorsal angulation were created and imaging procedures repeated. Change in tilt and UV between the non-fractured and later fractured forearms was defined as fracture-induced deformity. Deformity was measured radiographically and additionally calculated using RSA. Bland Altman analyses were used to estimate agreement between radiographically measured, and RSA calculated, fracture-induced deformity.

Results: Our results indicated that radiographs underestimate the amount of fracture-induced deformity. Mean measured differences (bias) in dorsal tilt deformity between radiographs and RSA were -2.5° for both observers. The corresponding values for UV were -1.4 mm and -1.5 mm.

Conclusion: Quantifying fracture-induced deformity on radiographs underestimated the actual deformity when compared to RSA calculated deformity. These findings suggest that clinicians, at least in part, base fracture management and potentially corrective surgery on inaccurate measurements.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10521277PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/20584601231205986DOI Listing

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