Historical Overview
- The term “silver fork deformity” is derived
from the injured wrist having the appearance of an overturned dinner fork.
Description
- Silver fork deformity is a wrist injury
characterized by a distal radius fracture within 2.5 cm of its distal end. The
arm will resemble a fork lying horizontally, so that the base of the fork’s tines
makes an upward curve. The resulting hump in the fractured arm is due to dorsal
displacement of the distal radius fragment.
Pathophysiology
- Silver fork deformity usually results from a
fall on an outstretched hand (FOOSH) which leads to a distal radius fracture.
Instructions
1. Ask the patient
to place his/her arm on the table.
2. Observe the
profile of the arm.
3. Determine if the arm resembles a fork
lying horizontally, so that the base of the tines makes an upward curve.