Abstract

BackgroundWe examined the visibility of fractures of hand and forearm in whole-body CT and its influence on delayed diagnosis. This study is based on a prior study on delayed diagnosis of fractures of hand and forearm in patients with suspected polytrauma.MethodsTwo blinded radiologists examined CT-scans of patients with fractures of hand or forearm that were diagnosed later than 24 h after admission and control cases with unremarkable imaging of those areas. They were provided with clinical information that was documented in the admission report and were asked to examine forearm and hands. After unblinding, the visibility of fractures was determined. We examined if time of admission or slice thickness was a factor for late or missed diagnoses.ResultsWe included 72 known fractures in 36 cases. Of those 65 were visible. Sixteen visible fractures were diagnosed late during hospital stay. Eight more fractures were detected on revision by the radiologists. Both radiologists missed known fractures and found new fractures that were not reported by the other. Missed and late diagnoses of fractures occurred more often around 5 pm and 1 am. Slice thickness was not significantly different between fractures and cases with fractures found within 24 h and those found later.ConclusionsThe number of late diagnosis or completely missed fractures of the hand and forearm may be reduced by a repeated survey of WBCT with focus on the extremities in patients with suspected polytrauma who are not conscious.Level of evidenceIII

Highlights

  • We examined the visibility of fractures of hand and forearm in whole-body CT and its influence on delayed diagnosis

  • We found that fractures of hand are more often detected in patients in cases with full inclusion of the hand in the whole-body CT (WBCT)

  • Other causes for missed or late diagnoses can be fatigue which has been associated with worse diagnostic performance of radiologists [11]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

We examined the visibility of fractures of hand and forearm in whole-body CT and its influence on delayed diagnosis. This study is based on a prior study on delayed diagnosis of fractures of hand and forearm in patients with suspected polytrauma. Injuries of the hand may be missed in 3.5 to 25% of patients with polytrauma [1, 2]. While there is no definition of ‘missed’, delayed’, or ‘late’, we decided to use the term ‘late diagnosis’ for injuries that were detected 24 h after admission but during hospitalisation as they were. This study is a follow up of a retrospective analysis of patient data on the sensitivity of WBCT for the detection of fractures of hand and/or forearm in intubated patients with suspected polytrauma [6]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call