• Pediatric emergency care · Aug 1999

    Can portable bedside fluoroscopy replace standard, postreduction radiographs in the management of pediatric fractures?

    • G Q Sharieff, J Kanegaye, C D Wallace, R I McCaslin, and J R Harley.
    • Department of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, San Diego and University of California, USA.
    • Pediatr Emerg Care. 1999 Aug 1;15(4):249-51.

    ObjectiveTo determine the accuracy of portable bedside fluoroscopy in documenting postreduction fracture alignment in the pediatric emergency department (ED).Design/SettingProspective trial in an urban pediatric ED.ParticipantsConvenience sample of 80 pediatric patients requiring ED reduction of isolated long bone fractures.MethodsPatients who underwent closed fracture reduction using portable fluoroscopic guidance (FluoroScan) in the ED were enrolled in the study. Postreduction images were obtained using both bedside fluoroscopy and conventional radiographs. A pediatric orthopedic subspecialist, blinded to clinical outcome, reviewed the fluoroscopic and radiographic images for adequacy of alignment and rated the utility of conventional radiography for fracture management.ResultsThe patients were 2.5 to 16 years of age (mean 8.3). Distal radial and radioulnar fractures comprised 96% (76/80) of cases. Sixty-three percent of the fractures were displaced, and the mean angulation of the primary fracture site was 24 degrees . Fluoroscopy was found to be 100% sensitive (75/75 cases) and 100% specific (5/5 cases) in predicting postreduction fracture position when compared to conventional radiographs. Intra-rater observer agreement on the necessity of conventional postreduction radiographs was 0.92 (95% CI 0.82-1.00) using the kappa coefficient. In no case did postreduction radiographs alter acute fracture management.ConclusionsBedside fluoroscopy with printed fluoroscopic images are highly reliable in evaluating fracture reduction and can replace conventional radiography in documenting adequate distal forearm fracture reduction when there is no intraarticular involvement.

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