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创伤性肩关节前脱位闭合复位后的保守治疗

Conservative management following closed reduction of traumatic anterior dislocation of the shoulder.

作者信息

Braun Cordula, McRobert Cliona J

机构信息

Institute for Evidence in Medicine (for Cochrane Germany Foundation), Medical Center - University of Freiburg, Breisacher Str. 153, Freiburg, Germany, 79110.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 May 10;5(5):CD004962. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004962.pub4.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Acute anterior shoulder dislocation, which is the most common type of dislocation, usually results from an injury. Subsequently, the shoulder is less stable and is more susceptible to re-dislocation or recurrent instability (e.g. subluxation), especially in active young adults. After closed reduction, most of these injuries are treated with immobilisation of the injured arm in a sling or brace for a few weeks, followed by exercises. This is an update of a Cochrane Review first published in 2006 and last updated in 2014.

OBJECTIVES

To assess the effects (benefits and harms) of conservative interventions after closed reduction of traumatic anterior dislocation of the shoulder. These might include immobilisation, rehabilitative interventions or both.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched the Cochrane Bone, Joint and Muscle Trauma Group Specialised Register, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, PEDro and trial registries. We also searched conference proceedings and reference lists of included studies. Date of last search: May 2018.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We included randomised or quasi-randomised controlled trials comparing conservative interventions with no treatment, a different intervention or a variant of the intervention (e.g. a different duration) for treating people after closed reduction of a primary traumatic anterior shoulder dislocation. Inclusion was regardless of age, sex or mechanism of injury. Primary outcomes were re-dislocation, patient-reported shoulder instability measures and return to pre-injury activities. Secondary outcomes included participant satisfaction, health-related quality of life, any instability and adverse events.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Both review authors independently selected studies, assessed risk of bias and extracted data. We contacted study authors for additional information. We pooled results of comparable groups of studies. We assessed risk of bias with the Cochrane 'Risk of bias' tool and the quality of the evidence with the GRADE approach.

MAIN RESULTS

We included seven trials (six randomised controlled trials and one quasi-randomised controlled trial) with 704 participants; three of these trials (234 participants) are new to this update. The mean age across the trials was 29 years (range 12 to 90 years), and 82% of the participants were male. All trials compared immobilisation in external rotation (with or without an additional abduction component) versus internal rotation (the traditional method) following closed reduction. No trial evaluated any other interventions or comparisons, such as rehabilitation. All trials provided data for a follow-up of one year or longer; the commonest length was two years or longer.All trials were at some risk of bias, commonly performance and detection biases given the lack of blinding. Two trials were at high risk of selection bias and some trials were affected by attrition bias for some outcomes. We rated the certainty of the evidence as very low for all outcomes.We are uncertain whether immobilisation in external rotation makes a difference to the risk of re-dislocation after 12 months' or longer follow-up compared with immobilisation in internal rotation (55/245 versus 73/243; risk ratio (RR) 0.67, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.38 to 1.19; 488 participants; 6 studies; I² = 61%; very low certainty evidence). In a moderate-risk population with an illustrative risk of 312 per 1000 people experiencing a dislocation in the internal rotation group, this equates to 103 fewer (95% CI 194 fewer to 60 more) re-dislocations after immobilisation in external rotation. Thus this result covers the possibility of a benefit for each intervention.Individually, the four studies (380 participants) reporting on validated patient-reported outcome measures for shoulder instability at a minimum of 12 months' follow-up found no evidence of a clinically important difference between the two interventions.We are uncertain of the relative effects of the two methods of immobilisation on resumption of pre-injury activities or sports. One study (169 participants) found no evidence of a difference between interventions in the return to pre-injury activity of the affected arm. Two studies (135 participants) found greater return to sports in the external rotation group in a subgroup of participants who had sustained their injury during sports activities.None of the trials reported on participant satisfaction or health-related quality of life.We are uncertain whether there is a difference between the two interventions in the number of participants experiencing instability, defined as either re-dislocation or subluxation (RR 0.84, 95% CI 0.62 to 1.14; 395 participants, 3 studies; very low certainty evidence).Data on adverse events were collected only in an ad hoc way in the seven studies. Reported "transient and resolved adverse events" were nine cases of shoulder stiffness or rigidity in the external rotation group and two cases of axillary rash in the internal rotation group. There were three "important" adverse events: hyperaesthesia and moderate hand pain; eighth cervical dermatome paraesthesia; and major movement restriction between 6 and 12 months. It was unclear to what extent these three events could be attributed to the treatment.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The available evidence from randomised trials is limited to that comparing immobilisation in external versus internal rotation. Overall, the evidence is insufficient to draw firm conclusions about whether immobilisation in external rotation confers any benefit over immobilisation in internal rotation.Considering that there are several unpublished and ongoing trials evaluating immobilisation in external versus internal rotation, the main priority for research on this question consists of the publication of completed trials and the completion and publication of ongoing trials. Meanwhile, evaluation of other interventions, including rehabilitation, is warranted. There is a need for sufficiently large, good-quality, well-reported randomised controlled trials with long-term follow-up. Future research should aim to determine the optimal immobilisation duration, precise indications for immobilisation, optimal rehabilitation interventions, and the acceptability of these different interventions.

摘要

背景

急性前肩关节脱位是最常见的脱位类型,通常由损伤引起。随后,肩部稳定性降低,更容易再次脱位或反复出现不稳定(如半脱位),尤其是在活跃的年轻人中。闭合复位后,大多数此类损伤通过将受伤手臂用吊带或支具固定几周,随后进行锻炼来治疗。这是Cochrane系统评价的更新版,该评价首次发表于2006年,上次更新于2014年。

目的

评估保守干预措施对创伤性前肩关节脱位闭合复位后的效果(益处和危害)。这些措施可能包括固定、康复干预或两者兼而有之。

检索方法

我们检索了Cochrane骨、关节和肌肉创伤组专业注册库、Cochrane对照试验中央注册库、MEDLINE、Embase、CINAHL、PEDro及试验注册库。我们还检索了会议论文集和纳入研究的参考文献列表。最后检索日期:2018年5月。

选择标准

我们纳入了随机或半随机对照试验,这些试验比较了保守干预措施与不治疗、不同干预措施或干预措施的变体(如不同持续时间),用于治疗初次创伤性前肩关节脱位闭合复位后的患者。纳入标准不受年龄、性别或损伤机制的限制。主要结局为再次脱位、患者报告的肩部不稳定测量指标以及恢复到伤前活动水平。次要结局包括参与者满意度、与健康相关的生活质量、任何不稳定情况及不良事件。

数据收集与分析

两位综述作者独立选择研究、评估偏倚风险并提取数据。我们与研究作者联系以获取更多信息。我们汇总了可比研究组的结果。我们使用Cochrane“偏倚风险”工具评估偏倚风险,并使用GRADE方法评估证据质量。

主要结果

我们纳入了7项试验(6项随机对照试验和1项半随机对照试验),共704名参与者;其中3项试验(234名参与者)是本次更新新增的。各试验的平均年龄为29岁(范围12至90岁),82%的参与者为男性。所有试验均比较了闭合复位后外旋位固定(有或无额外外展成分)与内旋位固定(传统方法)。没有试验评估任何其他干预措施或比较,如康复治疗。所有试验均提供了一年或更长时间的随访数据;最常见的随访时长为两年或更长。所有试验都存在一定程度的偏倚风险,鉴于缺乏盲法,常见的是实施偏倚和检测偏倚。两项试验存在较高的选择偏倚风险,一些试验在某些结局上受到失访偏倚的影响。我们对所有结局的证据确定性评级为极低。我们不确定与内旋位固定相比,外旋位固定在12个月或更长时间的随访后对再次脱位风险是否有影响(55/245对73/243;风险比(RR)0.67,95%置信区间(CI)0.38至1.19;488名参与者;6项研究;I² = 61%;极低确定性证据)。在内旋位固定组每1000人中有31.2人发生脱位这一具有代表性的中度风险人群中,这相当于外旋位固定后再次脱位减少103例(95%CI减少194例至增加60例)。因此,该结果涵盖了每种干预措施可能带来益处的可能性。单独来看,4项研究(380名参与者)在至少随访12个月时报告了经验证的患者报告的肩部不稳定结局测量指标,未发现两种干预措施之间存在临床重要差异的证据。我们不确定两种固定方法对恢复伤前活动或运动的相对影响。一项研究(169名参与者)未发现干预措施在受影响手臂恢复伤前活动方面存在差异的证据。两项研究(135名参与者)发现在因体育活动受伤的参与者亚组中,外旋位固定组恢复运动的情况更好。没有试验报告参与者满意度或与健康相关的生活质量。我们不确定两种干预措施在经历不稳定(定义为再次脱位或半脱位)的参与者数量上是否存在差异(RR 0.84,95%CI 0.62至1.14;395名参与者,3项研究;极低确定性证据)。7项研究仅以临时方式收集了不良事件数据。报告的“短暂且已解决的不良事件”在外旋位固定组中有9例肩部僵硬或强直,内旋位固定组中有2例腋窝皮疹。有3例“重要”不良事件:感觉过敏和中度手部疼痛;第八颈髓皮节感觉异常;以及6至12个月期间严重的活动受限。尚不清楚这3例事件在多大程度上可归因于治疗。

作者结论

随机试验的现有证据仅限于比较外旋位固定与内旋位固定。总体而言,证据不足以就外旋位固定是否比内旋位固定具有任何益处得出确凿结论。考虑到有多项未发表和正在进行的试验评估外旋位固定与内旋位固定,关于这个问题的研究主要优先事项包括完成试验的发表以及正在进行试验的完成和发表。同时,有必要评估其他干预措施,包括康复治疗。需要开展足够大样本、高质量、报告完善且有长期随访的随机对照试验。未来研究应旨在确定最佳固定持续时间、固定的确切指征、最佳康复干预措施以及这些不同干预措施的可接受性。

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[Treatment strategies for traumatic anterior shoulder dislocation].[创伤性前肩关节脱位的治疗策略]
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