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AJR 2004; 182:155-159
© American Roentgen Ray Society


Panoramic Versus Conventional Radiography of Scaphoid Fractures

Juan D. Berná1, German Chavarria2, Francisco Albaladejo2, Luis Meseguer2, Arturo Pellicer2, Miguel A. Sánchez-Cañizares2 and Domingo Pérez-Flores3

1 Department of Radiology, University General Hospital, C.E.P. Quesada Sanz c/Dr. Quesada Sans s/n, Murcia 30005, Spain.
2 Department of Traumatology, University General Hospital, Murcia 30005, Spain.
3 Department of Biostatistics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Murcia, Espinardo, Murcia 30100, Spain.

Received December 10, 2002; accepted after revision July 9, 2003.

 
Address correspondence to J. D. Berná (jdberna{at}um.es).


Abstract
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
 
OBJECTIVE. The objective of this study was to compare the diagnostic value of panoramic and conventional radiography in the detection of fractures of the carpal scaphoid bone.

MATERIALS AND METHODS. Panoramic (orthopantomographic) and conventional radiographs of 90 patients with acute or chronic wrist trauma were reviewed retrospectively. Images were analyzed and reviewed independently by four observers: two radiologists and two traumatologists. The kappa statistic was used to calculate intraand interobserver agreement and the correlation between the two imaging techniques.

RESULTS. Panoramic radiography of the wrist was superior to conventional radiography in ruling out scaphoid fractures (74%, 20/27) in patients with suspicious findings on conventional radiography; revealed more cases of scaphoid fractures (21.4%, 12/56); and revealed more cases of delayed union (n = 2), nonunion (n = 3), and union (n = 3). Agreement values were higher, with better inter- and intraobserver agreement, for the panoramic examinations than for the conventional radiographic examinations.

CONCLUSION. The panoramic examination of the wrist is a useful technique for the diagnosis and follow-up of scaphoid fractures. Its use is recommended as a complement to conventional radiography in cases with inconclusive findings.


Introduction
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
 
Scaphoid fractures are the most frequent of all fractures of the carpal bones [13]. Such fractures may be difficult to diagnose or may even pass unnoticed. Conventional radiography remains the most common method of assessment of clinically suspected scaphoid fracture. In cases with clinically suspected scaphoid fracture and negative or inconclusive findings on radiography, the wrist is usually immobilized and the radiographic examination is repeated 10–12 days later. The diagnosis of scaphoid fracture is essential to avoid complications such as delayed union, nonunion, avascular necrosis, and osteoarthritis, which may arise, especially when the diagnosis is missed initially and adequate timely treatment is not provided [1, 2, 4].

In cases of clinically suspected scaphoid fracture and negative or equivocal findings on conventional radiographs, several different imaging methods to increase the possibility of detection of these fractures are in current use. Among these are bone scintigraphy [5, 6], CT [7], MRI [8, 9], and sonography [10, 11].

The panoramic technique (orthopantomography) is widely used in the assessment of the dentomaxillofacial area. In 1991, we reported the first study of panoramic radiographs of the carpus [12], and in a second article [13], we reported that the panoramic technique is a useful complement to conventional radiography for the investigation of scaphoid fractures and nonunions. Since that second study, the number of patients evaluated with panoramic radiographs of the wrist has increased considerably. In this study, the role of panoramic radiography of the wrist is analyzed and correlated with that of conventional radiography, and inter- and intraobserver agreement is evaluated.


Materials and Methods
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
 
We performed a retrospective study of 90 patients (70 males and 20 females; mean age, 28.7 years; age range, 11–72 years) with acute or chronic wrist trauma who presented to our hospital between February 1994 and April 2000 and who were examined using panoramic radiography and conventional radiography. There were 46 left wrists and 44 right wrists. We have not included four cases with surgically treated scaphoid fractures: panoramic examination of these four was unsatisfactory because of considerable limitation of hand mobility. The panoramic technique was explained to patients in detail, and informed consent was obtained in all cases.

The 90 patients in this study were separated into three groups: Group 1 included 27 patients with acute trauma and with suspected scaphoid fracture seen on conventional radiographs. The panoramic study and a conventional radiographic examination were performed within minutes of each other, between 1 and 3 weeks after injury (mean, 12 days); in all cases, both panoramic and conventional radiographic examinations were repeated 3–4 weeks later. Group 2 comprised 41 patients with a history of wrist trauma and scaphoid fracture revealed in all cases on the initial panoramic examination. In one of these patients, the initial conventional radiograph was negative. Panoramic and conventional radiography was performed between 1 week and 20 years after the injury. Group 3 contained 22 patients with antecedents of surgery for scaphoid fracture (bone graft in 17 patients and fixation with screw in five patients), and the panoramic examination was performed between 1 month and 3 years after injury. In 17 patients in groups 2 and 3, radiographic follow-up took place between 2 and 19 months (mean, 5 months 14 days). In three patients, a new bone-grafting operation was performed because of evidence of nonunion. Patients in groups 1 and 2 with scaphoid fractures received conservative treatment.

The protocol for radiography of the wrist consisted of four radiographic projections (posteroanterior, lateral, oblique in pronation, and ulnar deviation) and a single posteroanterior panoramic projection in all patients. For the clarification of some cases ({approx} 20%), the variant of the standard posteroanterior panoramic projection was performed. The panoramic projections have been described elsewhere [12]. The Orthoralix SD Ceph (Philips Medical Systems, Monza, Italy) was used for panoramic studies of the wrist. Before the study, we designed and perfected a device [14] to achieve the appropriate positioning and immobilization of the extremity. With the patient sitting, standing, or preferably lying down, the standard posteroanterior panoramic projection was made with the forearm vertical and the hand in supination or with the wrist placed in a sagittal plane parallel to the sagittal sinus of the patient. The variant of the standard posteroanterior panoramic projection was performed using approximately 10° of rotation of the wrist toward the radial side. The panoramic images were obtained by using 60–64 kV and 4–6 mA. Rotation time was always 12 sec.

The initial diagnosis was made by one of the authors of this study and by a radiologist. Findings of the radiographic examinations were assigned to the following categories: negative examination, suspected scaphoid fracture, and scaphoid fracture. These cases were graded using the Herbert and Fisher classification [15]. On the basis of several studies [1, 1517] and of our own experience, we established the following diagnostic criteria: delayed union (fracture type C), failure to unite within 3–5 months after injury; and nonunion (fracture type D), evidence of the presence of a clear gap at the fracture site more than 5 months after injury. There were two subtypes: fracture type D1, unaltered spatial geometry of the scaphoid; and fracture type D2, a loss of bone mass and a change of shape and volume of the scaphoid. "Doubtful union" was defined as having no evidence of radiographic signs of union or nonunion; "union" was defined as having trabeculation or osseous bridges observed at the fracture line and, in the cases in which surgical intervention had occurred, as lacking evidence of radiolucency around the implant or of loosening of the implant. The final diagnosis was established by consensus of the authors of this study.

Observer Evaluation of Examinations
From the radiographs of the 90 patients in this study, 30 conventional radiographic and 30 panoramic examinations were randomly extracted and placed in numbered envelopes, with the conventional images separated from the panoramic images (30 sets of conventional radiographic and 30 sets of panoramic images). On each envelope, we wrote the time that had elapsed between the trauma and the radiographic examination. In surgically treated cases, the type of surgical intervention and the time elapsed between surgery and radiographic examination were also given.

Evaluation of these patients was performed by four observers: two traumatologists with 5 and 20 years' experience and two radiologists with more than 25 years' experience each. None of the observers had any connection with or foreknowledge of any of the radiographs selected or any training in the panoramic technique used for wrist study. For this reason, we provided a training session for each observer for uniformity of interpretation, using various examples of panoramic examinations of the wrist that were not included in the series of examinations that they were later to evaluate for our study. To avoid errors during their interpretations and generally to make their task easier, we made available to them on paper details of the diagnostic variables previously established and drawings of the classifications of scaphoid fractures.

Review of the images was performed twice by the four observers in randomized fashion and independently of each other. The first review was carried out in two sessions: in the first session, the 30 sets of conventional radiographs were reviewed, and on the following day, 30 sets of panoramic radiographs of the wrist were reviewed. The second review took place 2 months later, when each set was reviewed in a different order.

Statistical Analysis
We used software (SPSS for Windows, Statistical Package for the Social Sciences, Chicago, IL). The level of agreement of each patient's examination (conventional and panoramic) was analyzed by obtaining the kappa coefficient [18] and the percentage of agreement between the two imaging methods, and the two kappa coefficients were compared using the Student's t test. A p value of less than 0.05 was considered to be a statistically significant difference.

We also used the kappa coefficient to study inter- and intraobserver agreement by comparing levels of agreement between the two techniques. A kappa value of 0.20 or less indicated slight; 0.21–0.40, fair; 0.41–0.60, moderate; 0.61–0.80, good; and 0.81–1.00, very good agreement.


Results
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
 
The initial examination using the panoramic technique in the 90 patients in this study, as shown in Table 1, revealed 12 cases of scaphoid fracture that were not clearly shown on the conventional radiographs obtained at the same time. The panoramic examination also allowed most of the 27 cases with findings seen as suggestive of scaphoid fracture on conventional radiographs to be placed in the category of negative examinations (n = 20), and this examination showed three more cases of union (Fig. 1A, 1B, 1C). No cases in the categories of suspected fracture or doubtful union were seen on either the initial or the final panoramic examination. Moreover, the 20 cases of negative initial examinations were confirmed in the final diagnosis. Only three cases seen in the initial panoramic examination as type D2 fracture (one case) or type C fracture (two cases), which in the follow-up were confirmed as nonunion in all three cases, changed to union in the final diagnosis. These three patients had undergone bone graft surgery, and in the follow-up after surgery, scaphoid fracture union was observed (Fig. 2A, 2B, 2C, 2D). With the conventional radiographs, a greater variability between initial and final diagnosis was observed.


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TABLE 1 Comparison of Radiographic Findings Between Initial and Final Examinations

 


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Fig. 1A. 19-year-old man with wrist trauma. Conventional radiographic and panoramic examinations were performed 3 months after injury because of doubtful union of scaphoid fracture. Initial conventional radiograph shows doubtful scaphoid union.

 


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Fig. 1B. 19-year-old man with wrist trauma. Conventional radiographic and panoramic examinations were performed 3 months after injury because of doubtful union of scaphoid fracture. Panoramic radiograph shows fracture partially united (arrow). 1 = pisiform bone, 2 = triquetral bone, 3 = lunate bone, 4 = scaphoid bone, 5 = hamate bone, 6 = capitate bone, 7 = trapezoid bone, 8 = trapezium bone, D = centering guide of device.

 


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Fig. 1C. 19-year-old man with wrist trauma. Conventional radiographic and panoramic examinations were performed 3 months after injury because of doubtful union of scaphoid fracture. Conventional radiograph obtained 5 months after trauma shows fracture partially united, as seen in B.

 


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Fig. 2A. 20-year-old man who underwent bone graft because of nonunion of scaphoid fracture. Conventional radiographs obtained 12 months after trauma show doubtful fracture union.

 


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Fig. 2B. 20-year-old man who underwent bone graft because of nonunion of scaphoid fracture. Conventional radiographs obtained 12 months after trauma show doubtful fracture union.

 


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Fig. 2C. 20-year-old man who underwent bone graft because of nonunion of scaphoid fracture. Panoramic radiograph obtained at same time as A and B shows nonunion (fracture type D1 [15]).

 


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Fig. 2D. 20-year-old man who underwent bone graft because of nonunion of scaphoid fracture. Panoramic radiograph obtained 4 months after implant shows fracture union.

 

Table 2 shows the cases of scaphoid fractures detected at initial and final diagnoses on both panoramic and conventional radiography. The Herbert and Fisher classification [15] was used. Initial panoramic examination revealed seven more type A2 fractures (Fig. 3A, 3B, 3C) than the conventional radiographic examinations and two type C fractures (Fig. 4A, 4B), one type D1, and two type D2 fractures that were not clearly shown on later conventional radiographs. Agreement between initial and final diagnoses using the two imaging techniques was moderate for conventional radiography, with a kappa value of 0.49 and a percentage of agreement of 53.1%, and was very good for the panoramic examination, with a kappa value of 0.88 and an agreement percentage of 89.9%. Statistically very significant differences (p < 0.001) were found between the two techniques.


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TABLE 2 Distribution of Fractures Using Herbert and Fisher Classification[15]

 


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Fig. 3A. 49-year-old woman with acute trauma of wrist. Conventional radiography and panoramic radiography were performed 2 weeks after injury. Conventional radiographs shows no evidence of fracture.

 


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Fig. 3B. 49-year-old woman with acute trauma of wrist. Conventional radiography and panoramic radiography were performed 2 weeks after injury. Conventional radiographs shows no evidence of fracture.

 


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Fig. 3C. 49-year-old woman with acute trauma of wrist. Conventional radiography and panoramic radiography were performed 2 weeks after injury. Panoramic radiograph shows fracture line (arrow) (fracture type A2 [15]).

 


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Fig. 4A. 20-year-old man with wrist trauma. Conventional radiography and panoramic radiography were performed 5 months after injury. Conventional radiograph shows doubtful union.

 


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Fig. 4B. 20-year-old man with wrist trauma. Conventional radiography and panoramic radiography were performed 5 months after injury. Panoramic radiograph shows delayed union (fracture type C [15]).

 

Overall interobserver agreement for conventional radiography was moderate ({kappa} = 0.45, 54.8%). Interobserver agreement for the panoramic examination was good ({kappa} = 0.80, 90%). There was a very significant difference between kappa values for the two imaging techniques (p < 0.001). Overall intraobserver agreement for conventional radiography was good ({kappa} = 0.61, 71.6%). Intraobserver agreement for the panoramic examination was also good ({kappa} = 0.80, 90%). A significant difference (p < 0.001) between kappa values for the two techniques was seen. The panoramic examination of the wrist was well tolerated by all patients.


Discussion
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
 
Scaphoid fracture of the carpus represents 2% of all fractures and 75% of fractures of the carpal bones [13]. Conventional radiography is the diagnostic method most frequently used for the evaluation of patients with clinically suspected scaphoid fracture. However, an important percentage of fractures pass undetected in the initial examination, possibly because of the difficulty in seeing the fracture line, especially in cases of undisplaced fracture. Daffner et al. [19] recommended oblique radiography of the wrist for evaluation of these fractures, angling the radiographic tube 30° off the vertical toward the elbow. This process results in elongation of the scaphoid bone and improves visualization of the scaphoid bone compared with conventional radiography. Dias et al. [20] indicated that initial and 2- to 3-week radiographs of the scaphoid bone after an injury do not provide reliable or reproducible evidence of fracture. At present, there is disagreement over the merits of 2-week immobilization in cases of clinically suspected scaphoid fracture and a negative or inconclusive radiographic examination. For screening of occult scaphoid fracture, the use of other imaging methods such as bone scintigraphy or MRI [5, 6, 8, 9] is recommended to enable early treatment or to avoid overtreatment if no injury is detected. The drawbacks to these imaging methods are their lack of availability and their high cost. In a recent article, Hauger et al. [11] concluded that high-resolution sonography is a reliable and accurate method of evaluating occult fracture of the scaphoid.

The panoramic technique is widely used for the study of the dentomaxillofacial area. Its use has also been described for study of the wrist [12, 13]. Panoramic examination of the wrist permits more detailed visualization of the scaphoid bone than does conventional radiography and thus facilitates depiction of the fracture line. The results of our study clearly show that the panoramic examination of the wrist is superior to conventional radiography in the evaluation of patients with different clinical conditions (suspected scaphoid fractures, scaphoid fracture, or antecedents of surgery). The panoramic examination ruled out scaphoid fracture in 74% (20/27) of patients with suspected scaphoid fracture on conventional radiographs. The panoramic examination also revealed a greater number of fractures, 21.4% more (12/56), especially in cases of undisplaced type A2 fractures according to the Herbert and Fisher [15] classification, and also showed more cases of delayed union, nonunion, and union. A combination of findings of the clinical examination and of those supportive of the fracture as seen in the panoramic examination was considered to be diagnostic.

There are two drawbacks to the panoramic examination: images obtained in patients with marked lack of wrist flexibility are unsatisfactory; in cases of plaster cast–type immobilization, the plaster cast must be removed before the panoramic examination. Correct positioning of the wrist and immobilization of the limb are essential for achieving a clear image of the wrist. In some cases, such as in Figure 3C, blurring is observed centrally because the positioning device is an artifact in itself. For the purpose of minimizing blurring, all panoramic examinations of the wrist are now performed with the patient in a supine position. The support device, now in the commercialization phase, is the key factor in achieving successful panoramic images of the wrist.

The statistical data of our study show greater agreement (90%) in the panoramic wrist examination than in conventional radiography (53%). Inter- and intraobserver agreement was also higher for the panoramic examinations. These findings indicate that the panoramic examination is more accurate than conventional radiography in the diagnosis of scaphoid lesions. Therefore, the panoramic procedure is clearly indicated as a complement to conventional radiography in cases in which the conventional radiographic findings are inconclusive, and it can also be helpful in the follow-up of fractures of the scaphoid.

Imaging algorithms have been proposed [3] for the evaluation of suspected acute scaphoid fracture and avascular necrosis, delayed union, or nonunion, although it was acknowledged that it was difficult to propose an imaging strategy that would be universally applicable. In our hospital, for several years now, orthopedic surgeons have requested panoramic radiography whenever the findings of conventional radiography suggest a possible but doubtful diagnosis of scaphoid fracture or nonunion [13].

The panoramic examination of the wrist is a simple, rapid, economical procedure that facilitates the detection or exclusion of fractures. We recommend this procedure as a complement to conventional radiography for the clarification of inconclusive conventional radiographic studies.


References
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
 

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