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4 Dimensional - Impairment of Posttraumatic Forearm Rotation Evaluated With Computed Tomography (4D-IRECT)

University Hospital Center (CHU) logo

University Hospital Center (CHU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pronation-Supination of the Forearm, Impairment of

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: 4D-CT-scan

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04067232
RECHMPL18_0463
UF 7729 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim of this study is to develop a 4D-CT (4 Dimensional Computed Tomography) -scan acquisition method for estimating the cause of posttraumatic impairment of the forearm. Both forearms of patients with posttraumatic impairment of one of the forearm will be scanned using a 4D-CT-scan, during forearm rotation. Rotation of impaired and healthy forearms will be analysed and compared to each other. This method is intended to allow differentiation of motion patterns reflecting an osseous impairment from those caused by soft tissue pathology in order to improve treatment choice.

Full description

Forearm and wrist fractures are the most common of all fractures and mostly occur at the distal end of the radius. Distal radius fractures are associated with posttraumatic sequelae, which typically involve restricted forearm rotation. Diagnostics of dynamic traumatic pathologies are conventionally based on static (2D or 3D) imaging protocols using MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) or CT. However, interpretation of indirect suggestive findings - such as edema or abnormal bone positions - limits accuracy and inter-observer reliability. Dynamic 4D imaging (adding the fourth dimension of time) has the potential to discriminate whether forearm rotation deficit is due to an osseous deformity causing bony impingement or whether it is due to non-osseous pathology. Hence it may reduce unnecessary corrective osteotomies and guide the patient and surgeon towards the most effective surgical or conservative treatment choice - expectedly resulting in better outcomes and patient satisfaction. In addition, we aim to develop a classification based on the estimated motion patterns and assess its reliability. Furthermore we aim at acquiring knowledge of physiological mechanics of the radioulnar joint and to assess symmetry in radioulnar joint motions between two healthy forearms on 4D-CT-scans.

Enrollment

5 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients with a one-sided posttraumatic impairment of forearm pro- and/or supination at least 3 months after injury
  • Patients are above 18 years
  • Patients who are willing to give informed consent
  • National health insurance cover

Exclusion criteria

  • A history of trauma to both forearms
  • Any shoulder pathology or impairment preventing forward elevation of the arm as required during the scanning protocol
  • Neuromuscular pathology
  • Not able to understand or give informed consent
  • Pregnancy (βHCG positive), breast-feeding or the absence of effective contraception for women of child-bearing age
  • Legal incapacity (persons in custody or under guardianship)
  • Deprived of liberty Subject (by judicial or administrative decision)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

5 participants in 1 patient group

Patients with posttraumatic forearm impairment
Experimental group
Description:
All patients with a one-sided posttraumatic impairment of forearm pro- and/or supination at least 3 months after injury
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: 4D-CT-scan

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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