Jones Evan M, Barrow Aaron E, Skordas Nic J, Green David P, Cho Mickey S
Joint Base Elmandorf, JBER, AK, 99506 USA.
San Antonio Military Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, TX, 78234, USA.
Injury. 2017 Feb;48(2):327-331. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2016.12.024. Epub 2016 Dec 28.
There is limited research to guide physicians and patients in deciding whether it is safe to drive while wearing various forms of upper extremity immobilization. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of below-elbow removable splints and fiberglass casts on automobile driving performance.
20 healthy subjects completed 10 runs through a closed, cone-marked driving course while wearing a randomized sequence of four different types of immobilization on each extremity (short arm thumb spica fiberglass cast, short arm fiberglass cast, short arm thumb spica splint, and short arm wrist splint). The first and last driving runs were without immobilization and served as controls. Performance was measured based on evaluation by a certified driving instructor (pass/fail scoring), cones hit, run time, and subject-perceived driving difficulty (1-10 analogue scoring).
The greatest number of instructor-scored failures occurred while immobilized in right arm spica casts (n=6; p=0.02) and left arm spica casts (n=5; p=0.049). The right arm spica cast had the highest subject-perceived difficulty (5.2±1.9; p<0.001). All forms of immobilization had significantly increased perceived difficulty compared to control, except for the left short arm splint (2.5±1.6; p>0.05). There was no significant difference in number of cones hit or driving time between control runs and runs with any type of immobilization.
Drivers should use caution when wearing any of the forms of upper extremity immobilization tested in this study. All forms of immobilization, with exception of the left short arm splint significantly increased perceived driving difficulty. However, only the fiberglass spica casts (both left and right arm), significantly increased drive run failures due to loss of vehicle control. We recommend against driving when wearing a below-elbow fiberglass spica cast on either extremity.
关于指导医生和患者判断佩戴各种形式上肢固定装置时驾车是否安全的研究有限。本研究的目的是评估肘下可拆卸夹板和玻璃纤维石膏对汽车驾驶性能的影响。
20名健康受试者在封闭的、有锥形标志的驾驶路线上完成10次驾驶,每次上肢佩戴四种不同类型固定装置的随机序列(短臂拇指人字形玻璃纤维石膏、短臂玻璃纤维石膏、短臂拇指人字形夹板和短臂腕部夹板)。第一次和最后一次驾驶时不佩戴固定装置,作为对照。根据认证驾驶教练的评估(通过/失败评分)、撞到的锥形物数量、行驶时间以及受试者感知的驾驶难度(1 - 10模拟评分)来衡量驾驶表现。
在右臂人字形石膏固定(n = 6;p = 0.02)和左臂人字形石膏固定(n = 5;p = 0.049)时,教练评分失败的次数最多。右臂人字形石膏的受试者感知难度最高(5.2±1.9;p < 0.001)。与对照组相比,除左短臂夹板(2.5±1.6;p > 0.05)外,所有形式的固定装置都显著增加了感知难度。对照组行驶和佩戴任何类型固定装置行驶时撞到的锥形物数量或行驶时间没有显著差异。
驾驶员在佩戴本研究中测试的任何一种上肢固定装置时应谨慎。除左短臂夹板外,所有形式的固定装置都显著增加了感知驾驶难度。然而,只有玻璃纤维人字形石膏(左臂和右臂)因车辆控制丧失而显著增加了驾驶行驶失败的次数。我们建议在任何一侧上肢佩戴肘下玻璃纤维人字形石膏时不要驾车。