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Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether a sugar-tong splint is as effective as a long-arm cast in maintaining reduction of pediatric forearm shaft fractures in a randomized, prospective manner. Consented participants will be randomly assigned to be treated with either a sugar-tong splint or a long-arm cast (both standard of care treatments) in REDCap. Each participant will have a 50/50 chance of being assign to either treatment.


Clinical Trial Description

Forearm fractures are very common in the pediatric population and can often be treated with closed reduction and immobilization. Immobilization techniques include long-arm casting, short-arm casting and sugar-tong splinting. At the time of injury casts are usually split into two using a cast saw, known as bivalving, to allow for swelling and are overwrapped at a later time. By design sugar-tong splints allow for swelling and are overwrapped or converted to a cast at a later time. Traditionally long-arm casts have been used as the standard mode of immobilization for forearm fractures. Recent evidence demonstrates that long-arm casting is equivalent to better tolerated short-arm casting as an immobilization choice for distal third forearm fractures.1 Further work has shown that sugar-tong splints are also appropriate for treatment of distal third forearm fractures. No study has compared the efficacy of using a long-arm cast versus a sugar-tong splint for treatment of forearm shaft fractures. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03724773
Study type Interventional
Source Washington University School of Medicine
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase N/A
Start date March 2019
Completion date September 2020