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Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE (Read 13501 times)

GCW

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Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 29, 2009, 11:11:46 pm
Right, since I have time on my hand(s) I’ve been doing some research.  This is a summary of the best evidence on pulley injuries.  I’ve trawled through a lot of papers that aren’t included here, mainly because they are either irrelevant, or of poor quality.  These are the best of the lot.
Pulley injuries are graded I to IV.  Essentially grade IV is complete rupture of 2 or more pulleys, and it’s recommended these are treated by surgical reconstruction (although the evidence to support this is scanty).




Injury


Hand injuries in competition climbers.  Bollen SR, Gunson CK.  Br J Sports Med. 1990 Mar;24(1):16-8.
Retrospective study of 67 competitors at the British Open climbing competition, 1989.
26% had suffered a ring finger A2 rupture in the past.
All had bowstringing when examined.
24% had a PIPJ fixed flexion deformity.

Finger pulley injuries in extreme rock climbers: depiction with dynamic US. Klauser A, Frauscher F, Bodner G, Halpern EJ, Schocke MF, Springer P, Gabl M, Judmaier W, zur Nedden D.  Radiology. 2002 Mar;222(3):755-61.
Retrospective.  64 climbers, 256 fingers assessed.  Assessed the pulleys with ultrasound, looking at bone-tendon distance at levels of pulleys.
29% fingers symptomatic.  63% of these had MRI confirmed pulley injury.
Of these 13% had partial A2 rupture, 14% full A2 rupture.

Pulley Injuries in Rock Climbers  Schöffl V, Hochholzer T, Winkelmann HP, StreckerW  Wilderness and Environmental Medicine: Vol. 14, No. 2, pp. 94–100
604 injured climbers. 
All suspected pulley injuries had USS +/- MRI.
Of 604
   41% finger injuries
   13.4% forearm and elbow
   9.1% feet
   7.8% hand
   7.1% trunk
   5% shoulder
122 of 247 (49.3%) of finger injuries were pulleys.
50 of these pulley injuries (41%) were A2.
Of these 34% were partial ruptures, 66% complete A2 ruptures.
87 pulley injuries followed up.  80 (92%) were grades I-III, of which 8% had persistent pain  at 3 months following treatment with early functional therapy (not specified) and pulley protection in the form of a special ring.  6 of these (7.5%) still required taping at 1 year.



All grade IV injuries were treated without surgery (refused or misdiagnosed), and all required taping long term.


In summary, A2 injuries are the most common and occur mostly in the ring finger.  Around 8% are grade IV injuries (more than one complete pulley rupture), and convention (but not necessarily evidence) suggests reconstruction in these cases.
Grade IV injuries are more severe and bowstringing should be obvious clinically.  Whether imaging (USS or MRI) is essential is debatable, plus in the UK access to these is limited.






Recovery

There are no studies on how rehab should be performed.  Most papers looking at outcome go by the old-skool 4-6 weeks rest, then taping and slow introduction to climbing.

Strength measurement and clinical outcome after pulley ruptures in climbers. Schöffl VR, Einwag F, Strecker W, Schöffl I.  Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2006 Apr;38(4):637-43.
21 climbers reviewed after pulley injury (mean of 3.46 years, 0.25 to 18 years range).
Comparison of strengths of fingers performed after 2 days rest.  10 minutes specific warm up, then 10 minutes rest, then test.
Assessed by pulling on 2cm, rounded  edge and assessing drop in weight from body weight.
Measured for individual fingers (index, middle, ring), then index/middle/ring together crimped and open.  Comparison to uninjured side, plus other statistical analysis.
Injury distribution:   Ring    66.7%
               Middle   25.9%
               Index      3.7%
               Little      3.7%
41% of injured fingers also noted to have restricted movement in PIPJ (5-10 degrees in most)
Injured fingers showed same strength as uninjured fingers at 1 year.


Summary
No analysis done before 12 months, so unclear when full strength achieved.
No standardised rehab program, thus unclear which approach best.









Taping

The effect of circumferential taping on flexor tendon pulley failure in rock climbers.  Warme WJ, Brooks D.  Am J Sports Med. 2000 Sep-Oct;28(5):674-8.
9 pairs of cadaveric hands aged 20-47yrs.
Placed in a jig to recreate the crimp position.
2 fingers of each hand reinforced with tape (3 turns)- opposite fingers of each hand pair.
FDS and FDP distracted to pulley failure point.
A2 failed simultaneously with A3 and A4 in 55% of fingers.
Statistical comparison of 22 pairs of fingers showed no improvement in strength with taping .
Single pulley failure rates:
   A2   27%
   A4   15%
   A3   2%
   A1   1%
   A5   0%


Biomechanical effectiveness of taping the A2 pulley in rock climbers.  Schweizer A.  J Hand Surg
. 2000 Feb;25(1):102-7.
In vivo study to assess bowstringing in fingers, along with the force of bowstringing in crimp grips.
16 fingers assessed using 2 types of taping.
Taping over A2 reduced bowstringing by 2.8% and reduced force by 11%
Taping over distal end pf proximal phalanx reduced bowstringing by 22% and absorbed 12% of force.

Impact of taping after finger flexor tendon pulley ruptures in rock climbers.   Schoffl I, Einwag F, Strecker W, Hennig F, Schoffl V.  J Appl Biomech. 2007 Feb;23(1):52-62.
Assessment of H-taping and its ability to reduce the bone-tendon distance.
USS assessment of 8 subjects with A2 rupture and multiple pulley ruptures of A2 and A3.  Assessment of bone-tendon distance.
H taping reduced bone-tendon distance by 16%, whereas circumferential taping did not reduce it.
Strength improved by 13% in crimp position, none in open handing, using H taping.







Summary.
Well, who knows. 
The cadaveric study has flaws- altered biomechanics from freezing, potential problems with testing methods etc:
Fingers tested individually, with no thumb involvement- not true to most climbing grips.
Frozen hands, thus tendon elasticity reduced possibly altering the results.
Flexor chiasm function is complex and was not taken into account in this model, which may confound findings.
The number of fractures (31.9%) raises concerns as to the nature and technique of loading of the fingers.
Having said that the Strecker study appears to agree that there is no increase in strength with circumferential taping.  Some may argue that this is observer bias from the inventor of the H technique.
Basically, tape is cheap and likely does no harm if used for shorter (under 6 month) periods in rehab, I can’t see a problem with its use.



Other, non-SCIENCE stuff.

Dave MacLeod  www.davemacleod.com/articles/pulleyinjuries.html:
Suggests use varied grip styles.
Variable approach to taping- states evidence shows no benefit whilst stating taping increases pulley strength by 12%.
Suggests rest of 1-3 weeks after pulley injury, until finger moves through normal range without pain.
After this, build up gradually but stop if you get pain, climbing open handed.
Ice the injured finger- this is well supported in other injury types.
No specific return to climbing protocol.

Erik J Horst  www.nicros.com/archive/A2_pulley_injury.cfm
Rest, ice, take NSAIDs (eg Ibuprofen) if swollen.  Stop once swelling settles.
Light exercise when pain reduces.
Heated pad application 10 minutes, 3 times per day.  Stop the fags, Jim.
Gradual return to climbing.
Return to full power climbing if not painful.  Continue with taping for several months.

Other sites suggest similar regimes, equally vague :lol:




GCW’s Recommendations
If you suspect you have sustained a pulley injury, stop climbing.  If you are unsure of what you are doing, go and see somebody that has experience of treating these injuries.
Rest the finger, apply ice for up to 10 minutes at a time to reduce swelling.  NSAIDs have minimal evidence base, and have been shown to slow healing in other bony and tendon/ligament injuries.  Personally, I avoid them but there’s no good SCIENCE to support me.
There’s no good evidence that taping improves strength, but it’s cheap and easy so I personally would use it initially in the return-to-climbing phase.  I’d try to reduce use and stop by 6 months.
Return to climbing is the area with no evidence.  I personally would suggest rest of 2-3 weeks, then reassess.  During this initial period I’d do gentle movement exercises- finger flexion mostly, within limits of pain, plus gentle extension to (but not past) neutral.
Once a full range of movement is painless, I would suggest beginning active rehabilitation whilst using taping.  Now the lack of evidence kicks in and guessing starts.
Open handing has been shown to reduce pulley stress, so a return to gentle climbing (openhanded style) would seem reasonbable.  After another 3 weeks (studies have shown that collagen tissues need this time to adjust) you could move on (assuming there’s no pain) to the crimp grip.
Full strength is regained at 12 months, although no studies have looked to see if this occurs earlier.  In my experience, ligamentous/tendon recovery is complete by 6 months.  Hence, I’d (tentatively) suggest a return to normal climbing by then (if painfree).

Any thoughts, UKB posseeee?



saltbeef

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#1 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 29, 2009, 11:23:28 pm
good post. i've found if it goes pop then i need to have 3 weeks off, then tape for a couple of months, and take it steady as you build back up to full strength. finger injuries suck.

Oli

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#2 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 29, 2009, 11:26:52 pm
Thanks for collating that, quite interesting...
Recovery sounds about right too.

Now for a random question;
I've currently got two tweaked ring fingers. One is an old A2 injury that's recurred, but isn't too bad when climbing. The other is an A3/4 tear (not sure which, initially thought it was A3, but that seems unlikely). Can anyone explain why the old injury, while being significantly stronger, is alot more painful to prod/massage?

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#3 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 29, 2009, 11:42:09 pm
More scar tissue is my only guess Oli. good luck w/ rehab.

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#4 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 29, 2009, 11:43:25 pm
Good post GCW, thanks. Sticky?

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#5 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 12:33:12 am
Good post GCW, thanks. Sticky?

I'll find the time to stick it in the Wiki at some point if GCW doesn't mind.

EDIT : Made a start will work on finishing it off in due course.
« Last Edit: April 30, 2009, 01:08:09 am by slack---line »

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#6 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 01:17:49 pm
Great post, thanks for this. I've become very interested in finger injury and rehab since I'm recovering from my 3rd such problem in 3 years of climbing.

I tweaked 2 A5s just after Christmas, rested totally for 2 weeks, then came back to climbing just doing endurance on steepish routes with big holds, trying to be disciplined about open handing and focusing on technique. Did semi-regular icing and the Dave Mac water treatment, regular massage of affected areas, and taped up when climbing. Now the pain is there if I press hard at certain angles, but seems OK when climbing. In the last week I decided to carefully phase in some harder stuff at the wall, and yesterday managed to tick F7a+ which is an improvement on my previous grade!

My point is that while injuring myself totally sucked and made me feel I wasn't going to improve much this year, keeping climbing carefully through my injury has actually done me good. Endless lapping on routes and stamina circuits did get fricking dull, but better than not climbing at all. I guess improvement during injury is harder the more of a wad you already are, but there's always hope...   

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#7 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 01:32:11 pm
How the hell did you manage to strain your A5's?  :o

Rocksteady

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#8 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 03:25:24 pm
Ha, I don't know! Maybe they're A4s - but top knuckle, just below pad of finger tip on left middle and ring fingers. Fricking annoying. Think it was crimping repeatedly on a redpoint project I had, all the weight went through those two fingers really, but I just kept getting back on it. I didn't hear any pop, so I think they were part tears, probably cumulative. A week off and lots of food over Christmas before getting straight back on this project probably didn't help either...

:wall:

Fultonius

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#9 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 03:40:33 pm
Might actually be where your tendon joins the finger? (Stress fracture of the bone?)

All totally unqualified guesses.

I just can't imagine how hard criming would damage the A5 as the the DIP joint is hyperextended when crimping and, as far as I'm aware, there is not a great deal of load on those pulleys.

A4 sounds too low down (midway between the PIP and DIP joints).

I think it'll be something else. (although, it's proabbly a fairly similar recover plan, so wouldn't worry too much)

GCW

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#10 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 03:42:51 pm
Sounds like it could be inflammation at the tendinous insertion.

Any of you physio boffins have anything to add to the above?

Rocksteady

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#11 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 03:55:19 pm
Hmmm maybe I should have gone to see a specialist (or still should).

I just assumed it was a pulley injury, as although it is high in the finger it was a similar dull ache, pain on pressing, weak when climbing feeling that I experienced when I had a (mild) A2 injury.

I would have thought there would have been a lot of strain on that area of the finger - it's the most hyperextended part of mine when I crimp.

Maybe I'm crimping wrong! Or I just have weird fingers. They are a bit ET like...

[walks off to totally re-evaluate fingers and grip style]

But cheers for all the info and suggestions.  :thumbsup:

GCW

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#12 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 04:03:00 pm
Could be inflammation of your FDP insertion.  Or maybe chronic volar plate injury.  Be pretty rare to be an A5 rupture, usually only happens from sharp injuries.

Fultonius

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#13 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 04:16:41 pm
I'm with GCW.

Think about the way the tendon works when your DIP joint is hyperextended. Unless your A2, 3 and 4 pulleys have all been removed, the A5 pulley is not taking any strain. (When crimping, the tendon runs in as-near-as-dammit a straight line from the A3/A4 pulley to where it inserts in the tip of the finger)

The only time the A5 takes any strain if your DIP join is flexed at 90 deg and your PIP is stright (as in, dragging on sharp edges openhanded) even then, there's so little leverage that I doubt you'd strain it.

Like you say, crimping does put a lot of strain on that area.....just not on the A5!

Rocksteady

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#14 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 04:38:43 pm
Very interesting.

Well, the pain (now pretty dull, once sharper but never severe) is basically right on the front of the DIP joint. It's tender in a band across the finger, and more to the inside, which is why I thought it was the tendon.

What would the treatment be for 'inflammation of FDP insertion or chronic volar plate injury'?

Starting to think I should see a specialist about this - OK, it's clearly not severe as it hasn't stopped me climbing, but it has been painful/noticeably not right since the New Year. Which seems a long time for recovery. Mind you, I have been climbing 3x a week that whole time (albeit on big holds, dropping my grade). Nonetheless.

Thanks for taking the time to think about this guys. Much appreciated. 


Oh yeah, thought this http://www.aafp.org/afp/20060301/810.html was quite interesting, albeit not specific to climbing injuries.

GCW

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#15 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 04:43:07 pm
Starting to think I should see a specialist about this

Probably a reasonable step to be fair.  Advising over the internet is no substitute for seeing someone in the flesh.
Find a decent physio near you and they should be able to sort you out.
Good luck.

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#16 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 04:48:42 pm
Starting to think I should see a specialist about this

Probably a reasonable step to be fair.  Advising over the internet is no substitute for seeing someone in the flesh.
Find a decent physio near you and they should be able to sort you out.
Good luck.

Cheers - I'm cognisant of the vagaries of internet advice, no matter how knowledgeable or well-meant. I will report back. Thanks again.

miki

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#17 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
April 30, 2009, 05:59:36 pm
Good post GCW, thanks
not related to pulleys, but was an important reference to understand what went wrong when i was doing ring mono pulls.

Abstract

Performance rock climbing places high demands on the hand and may lead to specific injuries. In a “one-finger-pocket” hold, the interphalangeal joints remain in 20–40° flexion. To increase the maximum force of the holding finger by the quadriga effect, the interphalangeal joints of the adjacent fingers become almost maximally flexed. Holding a “one-finger-pocket” with the ring or small finger leads to a shift of the deep flexor tendons which increases the distance between the two adjacent origins of either the third or the fourth lumbrical. This may cause disruption and tear of that muscle. An organized haematoma in the third lumbrical was visible by ultrasonography in one of the three cases described.

http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0266768102002504

Clart

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#18 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
June 29, 2009, 02:57:35 pm
Starting to think I should see a specialist about this

Probably a reasonable step to be fair.  Advising over the internet is no substitute for seeing someone in the flesh.
Find a decent physio near you and they should be able to sort you out.
Good luck.

Cheers - I'm cognisant of the vagaries of internet advice, no matter how knowledgeable or well-meant. I will report back. Thanks again.

Hey Rocksteady, did you ever get any advice on this? I was feeling left out of the finger injury discussion so went and knackered mine.  :wall:

My ring finger went at the Camper’s chiasm area and made an audible pop. I'm guessing this is the A3 as my crude grip is unaffected but anything off the finger end feels tender, i.e. utilising the FDP tendon.

It's getting lots of ice, rest and squiggy ball rehab. Is it worth seeing a physio? I've seen one before who didn't seem to know much about fingers. What's the deal with that? Is it reasonable to ask for a refund if I don't feel their knowledge is up to scratch or have I paid my money and taken my chance?

Any knowledge appreciated.

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#19 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
June 30, 2009, 09:54:38 am
Hey Clart,

In the end I did get my GP to refer me to a hand specialist, but it was about a month before they could see me, and after 2 weeks my fingers were totally better, so I cancelled.

I think early in your injury it probably is worth seeing someone - I waited 3 months and then mine was pretty much better.

Sorry not to be of more help.

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#20 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
June 30, 2009, 01:27:51 pm
Hey no probs, glad the finger is better. I'm trying to use the injury time constructively by working on my weaknesses (arms) and trying to stay fit. May pop down the GP for peace of mind and keep up the icing.

So you reckon about 3.5 months recovery time? Sounds about right from what I've read above and elsewhere.

Rocksteady

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#21 Re: Pulley Injuries- the SCIENCE
July 01, 2009, 10:02:48 am
Well, of course it depends on what you've done!

But yeah, I injured 2 fingers and it took about 4.5 months for me to feel comfortable climbing without tape on smaller holds. I'd say 6 months later I'm now pretty confident in them again, though still am avoiding tweaky pockets.

In the past I had a part-torn A2 pulley and that took about 3 months to recover fully.

Hope yours gets better soon!

 

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