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Useful clinical rules save on radiographs and need to be used widely
What could possibly be more straightforward than the
assessment of an injured ankle? Patients with ankle injuries, usually sustained recreationally or in a simple fall, attend emergency departments throughout the world in their hundreds of thousands every
year. Most of these patients will have sustained simple injury to
ligamentous soft tissue or a small avulsion fracture of no clinical
significance. A minority will have sustained more serious fractures,
requiring immobilisation or internal fixation. Patients with ankle
injury constitute approximately 5% of all patients who visit emergency
departments, although fewer than 15% of these patients will have
clinically significant fractures.
Differentiating between these two groups of patients is not always
easy, particularly for relatively inexperienced clinicians. The safety
net for indeterminate examination has always been recourse to
radiography. However, such an unselective policy has resulted in
inestimable numbers of unnecessary exposures to radiation for little
diagnostic yield. In addition to being poor medicine, such profligacy
is a luxury that is no longer acceptable in any health system.
Faced with such inconsistent assessment and use of radiology, Stiell
and colleagues developed the concept of a clinical decision rule to
guide the assessment of ankle injuries During the subsequent decade, successive papers have reproduced
Stiell's findings and established the Ottawa ankle rules as a safe,
cost effective, and reliable approach to assessing injured ankles with
impressive consistency when applied by senior emergency doctors, junior
doctors in training, and nurse practitioners.
2 3
The applicability of the Ottawa ankle rules in children aged 2-16 years
has been confirmed with 100% sensitivity for significant fractures of
the ankle and mid-foot. This would allow a reduction in radiographs of
the ankle of 16% and of the foot by 29%, without missing any
clinically significant fracture.
4 5
In this issue, Bachmann et al report a systematic review of 27 studies
evaluating the implementation of the Ottawa ankle rules6 (p 417). A sensitivity of almost 100% was confirmed, with a possible overall reduction in the number of radiographs performed of 30-40%.
Despite these impressive figures, the use of the Ottawa ankle rules
remains variable, with far more common use reported by clinicians in
Canada and the United Kingdom compared with the United States, France,
and Spain.7 Critics of the decision rule concept cite loss
of clinical autonomy and reluctance to practise within rigid guidance.
However, such resistance is difficult to support given the large amount
of evidence in favour of the Ottawa ankle rules.
Of course, the value of a normal x ray film in providing
reassurance for patient and clinician should not be underestimated. However, the Ottawa ankle rules provide a high level of diagnostic confidence in the absence of radiographs when considering treatment options and recommendations for return to activity.
Applying the principle behind clinical decision rules to other
conditions seen in emergency departments in high numbers, with variable
clinical assessment and a tendency to order radiographs indiscriminately, has been a logical next step. The characteristic of
all these rules is high sensitivity, allowing clinicians to be
selective in the use of radiography. The Ottawa knee rule, for example,
resulted in a reduction of 26.4% of patients referred for radiography
of the knee.8 The Canada cervical spine rule for
radiography in alert and stable patients with trauma showed 100%
sensitivity for identifying clinically important injuries to the
cervical spine.9 Similarly, the Canada computed tomography head rule for patients with minor head injury defined high and medium
risk factors for clinically important brain injury and thus identified
the population for whom computed tomography was indicated.10 The cervical spine and head rules have been
generated but not yet fully tested and validated.
These rules are transforming the approach to the assessment of these
injuries and, after training, can be used by clinicians from a range of
backgrounds (including medical, nursing, and paramedic staff), in both
hospital and community settings.
Southampton General Hospital, Southampton SO16 6YD
in particular, to determine the
indications for radiography.1 Their objective was to
produce reliable and reproducible guidance based on objective criteria
and thus reduce the subjective component of assessment. The validation
of this rule involved thousands of patients in a structured programme
to generate rigorous rules with exceptional performance as a diagnostic
test. This became known as the Ottawa ankle rules, using bony
tenderness and inability to bear weight as positive indicators for
radiography (p 418).
Footnotes
Competing interests: None declared.
| 1. | Stiell IG, Greenberg GH, McKnight RD, Nair RC, McDowell I, Reardon M, et al. Decision rules for the use of radiography in acute ankle injuries: refinement and prospective validation. JAMA 1993; 269: 1127-1132[Abstract]. |
| 2. | Mann CJ, Grant I, Guly H, Hughes P. Use of the Ottawa ankle rules by nurse practitioners. Emerg Med J 1998; 15: 315-316[Abstract]. |
| 3. | Salt P, Clancy M. Implementation of the Ottawa ankle rules by nurses working in an accident and emergency department. Emerg Med J 1997; 14: 363-365[Abstract]. |
| 4. | Plint AC, Bulloch B, Osmond MH, Stiell I, Dunlap H, Reed M, et al. Validation of the Ottawa ankle rules in children with ankle injuries. Acad Emerg Med 1999; 6: 1005-1009[ISI][Medline]. |
| 5. | Libetta C, Burke D, Brennan P, Yassa J. Validation of the Ottawa ankle rules in children. J Accid Emerg Med 1999; 16: 342-344[Abstract]. |
| 6. |
Bachmann LM, Kolb E, Koller MT, Steurer J.
Accuracy of Ottawa ankle rules to exclude fractures of the ankle and mid-foot: systematic review.
BMJ
2003;
326:
417-419 |
| 7. | Graham ID, Stiell IG, Laupacis A, McAuley L, Howell M, Clancy M, et al. Awareness and the use of the Ottawa ankle and knee rules in 5 countries: can publication alone be enough to change practice? Ann Emerg Med 2001; 37: 259-266[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]. |
| 8. | Stiell IG, Wells GA, Hoag RH, Sivilotti ML, Cacciotti TF, Verbeek PR, et al. Implementation of the Ottawa knee rule for the use of radiograph in acute knee injuries. JAMA 1997; 278: 2075-2079[Abstract]. |
| 9. |
Stiell IG, Wells GA, Vandemheen KL, Clement CM, Lesiuk H, De Maio VJ, et al.
The Canadian C-spine rule for radiography in alert and stable trauma patients.
JAMA
2001;
286:
1841-1848 |
| 10. | Stiell IG, Wells GA, Vandemheen K, Clement C, Lesiuk H, Laupacis A, et al. The Canadian CT head rule for patients with minor head injury. Lancet 2001; 357: 1391-1396[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]. |
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