Crutches improve balance, assist propulsion, and remove weight from one or both legs, enabling patients to support themselves with their hands and arms. Typically prescribed for the patient with lower extremity injury or weakness, or one who has undergone a surgical procedure on a lower limb, crutches require balance, stamina, and upper-body strength for successful use.1 Crutch selection and walking gait depend on the patient’s condition. The patient who can’t use crutches may be able to use a walker.
Two types of crutches are currently prescribed by practitioners: axillary and nonaxillary. Patients with a sprain, strain, or cast should use axillary crutches, which are made of standard aluminum or wood. The primary advantage of axillary crutches is that they allow transfer of most of the patient’s body weight.2 Axillary crutches provide better trunk support than nonaxillary crutches.
Nonaxillary crutches include forearm crutches and platform crutches. These crutches are intended for long-term use.2 Forearm crutches transfer the weight of the patient to the upper arms and are indicated for patients with good upper-body strength who have generalized weakness in the lower extremities, such as patients with paraplegia or cerebral palsy.2 An aluminum forearm crutch has a collar that fits around the forearm and a horizontal handgrip that provides support. A wooden forearm crutch resembles wooden axillary crutches that end proximally with a closed leather band that can be situated around the proximal portion of the forearm. A platform crutch transfers the weight of the patient to the forearms.2 It includes a platform placed on the top level of the crutch, a vertical handgrip placed at the distal end of the platform, and Velcro straps applied around the patient’s forearm. This type of crutch is indicated for a patient with a painful wrist or hand condition (such as arthritis), a weak handgrip because of pain or deformity of the hand or wrist, or elbow contractures.
Crutches with axillary or forearm pads, handgrips, and rubber suction tips ▪ Optional: gait belt, full-length mirror.
After choosing the appropriate crutches, adjust their height with the patient standing or, if necessary, recumbent. (See Fitting a patient for crutches.)
Instruct the patient and family (if applicable) to contact the practitioner about any questions regarding the use of crutches or if the crutches don’t fit, break, or are lost. Also instruct the patient to notify the practitioner if blisters, rashes, painful calluses, or skin breakdown of the hand, forearm, or underarm develops. Advise the patient to avoid habitually leaning on the crutches. Explain that the patient’s weight should rest on the hands, not the underarm supports.21 Instruct the patient to seek immediate care if sudden numbness of the hand or arm develops.
When used by a patient with a chronic condition, the swing-to and swing-through gaits can lead to atrophy of the hips and legs if appropriate therapeutic exercises aren’t performed routinely. Prolonged pressure on the axillae can damage the brachial nerves, causing brachial nerve palsy. Crutch use can also lead to blisters, rashes, painful calluses, and skin breakdown of the hand, forearm, and underarm.
Record the date and time of training, the type of gait, the amount of assistance required, the distance walked, and the patient’s tolerance of the crutches and gait. Document teaching provided to the patient and family (if applicable), their understanding of that teaching, and any need for follow-up teaching.
Recommendations of the Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee and the HICPAC/SHEA/APIC/IDSA Hand Hygiene Task Force
. MMWR Recommendations and Reports, 51(RR-16), 145. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/pdf/rr/rr5116.pdf (Level II)Infection control. 42 C.F.R. § 482.42
.Accreditation requirements for acute care hospitals
. Chicago, IL: Accreditation Association for Hospitals and Health Systems. (Level VII)Patient’s rights. 42 C.F.R. § 482.13(c)(1)
.Accreditation requirements for acute care hospitals
. Chicago, IL: Accreditation Association for Hospitals and Health Systems. (Level VII)Medical record services. 42 C.F.R. § 482.24(b)
.Accreditation requirements for acute care hospitals
. Chicago, IL: Accreditation Association for Hospitals and Health Systems. (Level VII)Concepts and competencies for practice
. (9th ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Wolters Kluwer.