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The Ottawa Ankle Rule helps emergency physicians decide whether to order x-ray imaging for ankle injuries. It is based on four criteria: location of pain, malleolar tenderness, inability to bear weight, and patient history.
The Ottawa Ankle Rules were established to help physicians decide which patients should have an x-ray following an acute ankle injury. [3] Evidence supports the Ottawa ankle rules as an accurate instrument for excluding fractures of the ankle and mid-foot.
Nov 3, 2018 · Learn how to use the Ottawa ankle rules, a clinical decision-making strategy for ankle and midfoot injuries. Find out the criteria, sensitivity, and validation of this tool.
In medicine, the Ottawa ankle rules are a set of guidelines for clinicians to help decide if a patient with foot or ankle pain should be offered X-rays to diagnose a possible bone fracture. Before the introduction of the rules most patients with ankle injuries would have been imaged.
A guideline for determining which patients require ankle x-rays based on pain, swelling, and weight-bearing status. Includes exclusions, recommendations, and foot x-ray series for midfoot injuries.
Learn how to use the Ottawa Ankle Rules (OARs) to assess for fractures of the ankle and mid-foot after acute trauma. The OARs have high sensitivity and moderate specificity, and can reduce the need for radiographs by 30-40%.
May 24, 2017 · OAR is a guideline to help decide if radiography is needed for ankle or foot fracture. It was developed for adults 18+ and can be used by physical therapists, emergency physicians, or primary care physicians.