Current location - Plastic Surgery and Aesthetics Network - Plastic surgery and medical aesthetics - Fracture of distal radius of left hand, involving articular surface. After 20 days, the plaster was removed and the arm was deformed. The doctor said that the joint reduction was not done well. Can it
Fracture of distal radius of left hand, involving articular surface. After 20 days, the plaster was removed and the arm was deformed. The doctor said that the joint reduction was not done well. Can it
Fracture of distal radius of left hand, involving articular surface. After 20 days, the plaster was removed and the arm was deformed. The doctor said that the joint reduction was not done well. Can it be corrected now? There is no particularly good way for 20 days, because the bone has grown a part, which means there is no way to correct the deformity by manual reduction. Only through surgical treatment, the bone needs to be broken first, then reset and then fixed internally. But generally conservative people will let patients exercise their functions first. If the deformity heals, but it does not affect their function, there is no obvious pain, or the function has little effect, they will not consider surgical treatment. The first purpose of our treatment is to restore function and eliminate pain, followed by anatomical reduction of fracture site, that is, bone 100% alignment. If the function of the hand is not greatly affected, it is very painful to give you a knife at this time, and because of soft tissue injury. So now I suggest you do functional exercise first, but you really can't. You're thinking about surgery.