WEDNESDAY, April 16 (HealthDay News) -- A review of past
research shows cheaper, removable splints are as safe and effective
as traditional plaster casts for treating minor wrist fractures in
children.
But one U.S. orthopedic expert disagrees, saying that kids may
be tempted to take off the split at inappropriate times and cause
further damage to themselves.
"Yes, you can treat a child's buckle fracture with a splint, but
I don't," Dr. Leon Benson, spokesman for the American Academy of
Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS), said in a prepared statement. "In my
experience, a child under 10 is not going to keep a splint on, and
who is going to take responsibility for that fact -- the doctor.
And, given that fact, what parent wants to sit on pins and needles
waiting for it to happen when a safe plaster cast insures it
won't?"
Minor wrist, or buckle, fractures are common among children.
They often occur when a child falls on an outstretched hand.
Traditionally, physicians treat these incomplete bone fractures by
covering the wrist to just below the elbow in a plaster cast for a
short time, often about three weeks.
Of the 10 reviewed studies that compared plaster casting to
removable splints in 827 children with wrist fractures, none
reported a bone deformity in any patient. The review, conducted by
British researchers, was published in the current issue of
The Cochrane Library.
"There are minor, or buckle, fractures of the wrist,
particularly in toddlers and preschool infants, which are currently
being over-treated with a plaster cast and clinic follow-up," lead
investigator Alwyn Abraham, a consultant orthopedic surgeon in
pediatrics at the Leicester Royal Infirmary, said in a prepared
statement. "Provided these are accurately diagnosed in an emergency
department, these minor fractures can be treated with a removable
splint. Removal can be done at home with no further follow-up."
Plaster casts that parents could remove at home also performed
as well as traditional casts, and parents preferred these more, the
researchers said. Children and parents also preferred the removable
Futura-brand splint, which was less expensive and less
restrictive.
Benson agreed with the reviews conclusions in theory, but not in
practice.
"My experience is that the younger child's pain decreases
dramatically more quickly with plaster casting than a splint, and
adolescents in splints often remove them around their friends,
because they find them embarrassing," said Benson, who is also an
associate clinical professor of orthopedic surgery at the
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "With a
plaster cast, everyone can sleep at night; nothing can make that
cast fall off. Yes, having a plaster cast for a few weeks is a
hassle in ways, though it is possible to cover it and bathe or
shower. But for the whole child and the whole family, it is a more
reasonable treatment."
Benson also said the economic implication of the findings could
give parents no option that offered them peace of mind: "A review
like this could be used, in the U.K. system, to force people to use
cheaper splinting methods of treatment rather than have a choice
for plaster-casting for their child for reasons beyond narrow
measures of clinical efficacy. This would be unfortunate."
More information
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