Classic history and presentation: Injury due to twisting or flexing the thumb during –
- Carpentry
- Skiing
- Contact sports
- Martial arts
- Basketball
- Wrestling
- Thumb fractures are common because the thumb is highly mobile. Thumb fractures account for 25% of all metacarpal fractures, with 80% involving the base of the thumb.
- This is most common in children younger than 16 years (often from crush mechanisms) and adults older than 65 years.
- Thumb metacarpal fractures usually occur in younger males between ages 10 and 30 years.
- Calcium deficiency
- History of bone disease
- Previous thumb injury
- Type I (Bennett fracture)
- Most common thumb fracture.
- Intra-articular fracture involving the carpometacarpal (CMC) joint with a clean break, resulting in a palmar ulnar fragment.
- Type II (Rolando fracture)
- Intra-articular fracture involving the CMC joint with a Y-shaped or T-shaped break, resulting in 2 or more fragments.
- Type III
- Extra-articular oblique or transverse fracture.
- Extra-articular epibasal thumb fracture (pseudo-Bennett).
- Type IV
- Extra-articular pediatric fracture involving the proximal physis.
- Intra-articular comminuted
- Severely shattered intra-articular fracture.