Project 170575

Efficacy of a physical therapy intervention for the early treatment of acute ankle sprains identified in the emergency department: a randomized controlled trial

170575

Efficacy of a physical therapy intervention for the early treatment of acute ankle sprains identified in the emergency department: a randomized controlled trial

$703,111
Project Information
Study Type: Trial Randomized_Controlled_Trial
Therapeutic Area: Orthopedics
Research Theme: Clinical
Disease Area: ankle sprains
Data Type: Canadian
Institution & Funding
Principal Investigator(s): Brison, Robert J; Brouwer, Brenda J
Co-Investigator(s): Aiken, Alice B; Day, Andrew G; Johnson, Ana; Pelland, Lucie C; Pichora, David R; Pickett, William
Institution: Queen's University (Kingston, Ontario)
CIHR Institute: Musculoskeletal Health and Arthritis
Program: Randomized Controlled Trials
Peer Review Committee: Randomized Controlled Trials - A (RSA)
Competition Year: 2008
Term: 3 yrs 0 mth
Abstract Summary

Soft tissue injuries to the ankle (ankle sprains) are common injuries treated in Canadian emergency departments. An important proportion (up to 40%) of these injuries result in chronic functional limitations that may affect work and leisure activities. However, there is little evidence surrounding the optimal care of these injuries. While evidence exists from studying athletes that physical therapy can be effective in the treatment of ankle injuries, similar treatments have yet to be tested in more general populations, such as those treated in emergency departments. We propose to conduct a randomized controlled trial in order to assess the efficacy of a physical therapy based intervention among adult patients presenting to a hospital-based emergency department with acute ankle sprains. We will recruit approximately 500 patients for study, randomize them to one of two treatment areas (usual emergency care plus physical therapy vs. usual emergency care alone), then follow both groups and compare patient experiences with functional limitations up to six months post-injury. This trial is important because: 1) despite being common, there is little evidence surrounding the optimal treatment of ankle sprains in emergency department settings; 2) existing research from other clinical settings (e.g. sports injury management) suggests that physical therapy is beneficial; 3) there is a paucity of published randomized clinical trials of physical therapy interventions for the acute treatment of ankle sprains in the general population; 4) we expect that the findings will inform clinical practice for both emergency physicians and allied health professionals including physical therapists; 5) we believe the potential to reduce the burden of disability from this injury exists and this may be accomplished with early intervention

Research Characteristics

This project includes the following research characteristics:

Health Technology Assessment
Resource Utilization
Productivity Outcomes
Health System Integration
Patient Reported Outcomes
Real World Evidence
Knowledge Translation Focus
Quality of Life
Time to Event
Composite Endpoint
Combination Therapy
Study Justification

"conduct a randomized controlled trial to assess the efficacy of a physical therapy based intervention among adult patients presenting to a hospital-based emergency department with acute ankle sprains"

Novelty Statement

"paucity of published randomized clinical trials of physical therapy interventions for the acute treatment of ankle sprains in the general population"

Methodology Innovation

evaluating early physical therapy intervention in emergency department setting for acute ankle sprains

Keywords
Ankle Sprain Epidemiology Functional Recovery Physiotherapy Randomized Control Trial Wounds And Injuries