This study compares patients with post traumatic elbow stiffness and evaluate the range of motion improvement with two types of treatment: surgical release versus non-surgical rehabilitation protocol with orthoses.
The study of the treatment of post-traumatic stiffness of the elbow presents numerous challenges. Due to the great variability of the types of lesions, causes and symptomatology, there are great difficulties in the homogenization of protocols and in the comparison of results between the different treatments. Patients with different levels of severity and time of stiffness, presence of arthrosis or not, and significant symptoms such as pain. For patients with elbow stiffness without vicious consolidation, pseudoarthrosis, intra-articular synthesis material or heterotopic ossification, and who have already failed conventional therapy, basically have two treatment options. Which will be the subject of this study: surgical release or non-surgical rehabilitation protocols with orthoses. In meta-analysis, evaluating the elbow range of motion gain with rehabilitation protocols associated with orthoses, the mean gain varies from 20º to 40º, depending on the type of orthosis used. On the other hand a systematic review evaluated movement gain with different surgical techniques. Observed a mean gain of 51º for open releases, but with higher complication rates. However, there are no comparative studies in the literature comparing this 2 types of treatment for post traumatic elbow stiffness: surgical release and non-surgical rehabilitation protocol with orthoses in patients who have already performed conventional physiotherapy with no success.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
30
Elbow arthrolysis by posterior access
Rehabilitation with splinting protocols
Instituto de Ortopedia e Traumatologia
São Paulo, Brazil
Elbow range of motion improvement in degrees
The gain will be measured with a goniometer centered on the axis of rotation of the elbow by a external examiner.
Time frame: 6 months
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