Contents

SynopsisCodesLook ForDiagnostic PearlsDifferential Diagnosis & PitfallsBest TestsManagement PearlsTherapyReferences

View all Images (2)

Reversed Colles fracture
Other Resources UpToDate PubMed

Reversed Colles fracture

Contributors: Won Park, Danielle Wilbur MD
Other Resources UpToDate PubMed

Synopsis

Causes / typical injury mechanism: The typical mechanism of injury is a fall onto an outstretched hand (FOOSH) with the wrist in a flexed position.

Classic history and presentation: Patients will usually come to the ED with the classic story of FOOSH. This can be from tripping, riding a bike, or getting hit on the dorsum of the hand. Younger patients usually have high-energy mechanism of injury. Older patients or those with osteoporosis may present with a Smith fracture due to low-energy injury, such as a fall from a standing height or lower.

Prevalence: The distal radius is the most common fracture in the upper extremity with about 600 000 cases annually in the United States. Smith fractures make up about 5% of all radial and ulnar fractures combined. The highest incidence of Smith fractures is in young men and elderly women. For those aged 64-94, women are 6 times more likely to sustain a Smith fracture.

Risk factors:
  • Older age
  • Osteoporosis
  • Female sex
Pathophysiology: Smith fracture is usually caused by a FOOSH resulting in a volar displacement of the distal radius.

Grade / classification system: Historically, Smith fractures were described as extra-articular only. In Smith's original description of his fracture, he stated that "the injury is a fracture of the lower end of the radius, with displacement of the lower fragment along with the carpus forwards, and the head of the ulna backwards." In 1957, F. Brian Thomas expanded the definition of the Smith fracture to the classification system below which includes a description very similar to that of the Barton fracture.
  • Type 1: Extra-articular fracture only. Accounts for 85% of Smith fractures.
  • Type 2: Intra-articular oblique fracture accounting for 13% of cases. Similar to the reverse Barton fracture.
  • Type 3: Juxta-articular fracture accounting for less than 2% of cases.

Codes

ICD10CM:
S52.549A – Smith's fracture of unspecified radius, initial encounter for closed fracture

SNOMEDCT:
123972004 – Smith fracture

Look For

Subscription Required

Diagnostic Pearls

Subscription Required

Differential Diagnosis & Pitfalls

To perform a comparison, select diagnoses from the classic differential

Subscription Required

Best Tests

Subscription Required

Management Pearls

Subscription Required

Therapy

Subscription Required

References

Subscription Required

Last Reviewed:04/04/2022
Last Updated:04/17/2022
Copyright © 2024 VisualDx®. All rights reserved.
Reversed Colles fracture
Copyright © 2024 VisualDx®. All rights reserved.