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Carpal Bone Fractures [PDF]

open access: possibleOrthopedic Clinics of North America, 2007
Carpal bone fractures make up a significant proportion of injuries to the wrist. The complex bone shape and articulations make diagnosis more difficult and missed injuries more common. This article reviews carpal bone fractures excluding the scaphoid.
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The Hunchback Carpal Bone

The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, 1961
Recognition of an os styloideum may prevent the embarrassment of its being mistaken for a more serious entity, such as fracture or tumor. In symptomatic cases, surgical removal of the prominence may be done, although the reports as to the lasting value of this are conflicting.
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FRACTURES OF THE CARPAL BONES

Hand Clinics, 1997
Fractures of the carpal bones, excluding the scaphoid, are less common and are often missed on standard, plain radiographs. The diagnosis requires knowledge of the anatomy and common fracture patterns of the bones and the specialized radiographic views necessary to image them.
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CYSTIC LESION IN CARPAL BONE

Hand Surgery, 2000
Six cases of symptomatic cystic lesions of carpal bones which underwent operative treatment were reviewed. Definite diagnosis, etiology and treatment were also discussed. The lesions occurred in the scaphoid, lunate, capitate and triquetrum, and were multiple lesions in four of the six cases.
Yoshinori Oka, Masayoshi Ikeda
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Carpal bone involvement in gout

Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery, 2007
The deposition of gout tophi in the hand occurs relatively late in the disease. Involvement of carpal bone is rarely reported in the literature. We present a 40-year-old man with a long duration of gouty arthritis involving the carpal bones.
J. Terrence Jose Jerome   +2 more
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Fractures of the Carpal Bones

Radiology, 1957
The experience of the average radiologist with fractures of the carpal bones is limited by the relative rarity of many of these injuries. The navicular fractures are most important and are relatively common. Other fractures are usually less significant, but the radiologist should be aware of their prognosis and the complications to be expected so that ...
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Carpal bone fracture not to be missed

Emergency Medicine Journal, 2021
A young patient presented to the emergency department after a fight in which he sustained an injury to his right hand by punching. On clinical examination, there were no lacerations; there was noticeable swelling on the ulnar side of the dorsum of the wrist and he was very tender just distal to the ulnar styloid process.
Gautam Reddy   +3 more
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Coalition of the carpal bones

Skeletal Radiology, 1981
Eight patients with carpal coalition are recorded in a predominantly white population with an incidence of 0.11%. These most commonly involve the lunate and triquetral, and the capitate and hamate, and less commonly fusion of the trapezium and trapezoid with the scaphoid.
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Carpal Bone Cyst

1992
Roentgenograms of 1273 wrists of 877 outpatients and 156 wrists of 79 patients with vibration disease were reviewed in order to analyze the clinical and radiographic features of carpal bone cysts. The evaluation included the incidence, location, and size of the cysts. Correlations between incidence and age, sex, laterality, and ulnar variance were also
Toshihiko Ogino   +3 more
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Chondromyxoid Fibroma in a Carpal Bone

Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1984
An unusual lesion developed in the trapezoid of a 25-year-old man. The tumor had histologic features most consistent with a diagnosis of chondromyxoid fibroma and had not recurred four years after curettage and bone grafting.
Robert A. Robinson   +2 more
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