Dias J J, Thompson J, Barton N J, Gregg P J
Glenfield General Hospital, Leicester, England.
J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1990 Jan;72(1):98-101. doi: 10.1302/0301-620X.72B1.2298805.
Twenty observers reported independently on the presence or absence of a fracture of the scaphoid on 60 sets of radiographs; these included initial and 2- to 3-week views in patients in whom the outcome was known, normal scaphoids and random copies of these. Analysis of variance of the accuracy of observations revealed that the 2- to 3-week radiographs did not improve diagnostic ability and that this was independent of the experience or seniority of the observer. For normal radiographs, 20% of the observations reported a fracture. Reproducibility of opinion improved with experience but this did not help with accuracy. Radiographs without accurate clinical observation should not determine the management of the suspected scaphoid fracture.