A 9 year-old boy presented with a mass in the left wrist and motion-induced discomfort. The patient had a trigger phenomenon on the palmar side of his wrist caused by extension and flexion of the middle finger. The patient had no significant medical history. A 5-cm mass was visualized extending from the palm over the wrist. The patient did not have finger numbness, motor impairment, thenar muscle atrophy, or a Tinel-like sign of the wrist. X-ray imaging showed no abnormalities. A magnetic resonance image (MRI) showed a mass around a single flexor tendon, a lowintensity mass on T1-weighted images (Fig.
We report two extremely rare cases of dorsal radial avulsion injury of the triangular fibrocartilage complex accompanied by an avulsion fracture of the sigmoid notch of the radius. Anatomical reduction of the bone fragment in conjunction with reattachment of the dorsal portion of the radioulnar ligament to the radial sigmoid notch were necessary to restore stability of the distal radioulnar joint and tension of the triangular fibrocartilage proper.
Pseudarthrosis of the capitate bone is extremely rare. In this case, the injury and pseudarthrosis was so old, the bone with a nutrient vessel was grafted, and bone union and excellent results are obtained.
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