Hand & Wrist · Acute injury

Scaphoid Fracture

The most commonly missed carpal bone fracture

Cared for across all 6 OSI locations

Overview

what it is and why it matters
Palmar dissection of the hand and wrist showing the eight carpal bones, flexor tendons, and median and ulnar nerves.
Hand and wrist anatomy. Eight small carpal bones form the wrist and connect the forearm to the five metacarpals of the palm. Finger tendons and the median and ulnar nerves pass through narrow tunnels in the wrist on their way into the hand.
Wilfredor · Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 3.0

The scaphoid is the most commonly fractured carpal bone, typically from a fall on an outstretched hand. It is notorious for two problems: first, it is frequently missed on initial X-rays because early fractures are often invisible; second, the blood supply to the proximal pole is tenuous and retrograde, making the proximal pole — the most common site of high-energy fractures — prone to avascular necrosis if healing is delayed or inadequate.

Classic presentation is anatomic snuffbox tenderness (the hollow between the thumb tendons on the dorsoradial wrist) after a FOOSH injury.

Diagnosis

exam first, imaging second

Initial X-rays may be negative. MRI within 3–5 days is the most sensitive test for acute scaphoid fracture and has replaced bone scan at most centers. CT is the best test for assessing fracture displacement, waist vs. proximal pole location, and — in delayed presentations — evaluating for avascular necrosis or nonunion.

Treatment Path

how care progresses at OSI
1

Thumb spica cast

Undisplaced distal pole and waist fractures in low-demand patients can be cast for 8–12 weeks, with union rates >90%.

Surgical Options at OSI

if non-operative care isn't enough

Displaced fractures (>1 mm), proximal pole fractures, athletes seeking faster return to sport, and any fracture nonunion are managed surgically.

Providers Who Treat Scaphoid Fracture

sports-medicine team

Michael S. Vrana, M.D.

David B. Templin, M.D.

Trent Twitero, M.D.

Further Reading

authoritative sources

External patient-education references and related OSI pages for additional background:

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