Difference between revisions of "RADIOGRAPH-LATERAL WRIST"
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[[Summary Article| | ===== [[Summary Article|'''SUMMARY''']] ===== | ||
1. Remember that you do not see the <i>first row of bones - </i>scaphoid & trapezium, but the <i>second row - </i>lunate & capitate. | |||
<br/>2. The lunate appears as a <i>moon shaped bone. | <br/>2. The lunate appears as a <i>moon shaped bone. </i> | ||
<br/>3. Important to detect SCAPHO-LUNATE DISLOCATION. | <br/>3. Important to detect SCAPHO-LUNATE DISLOCATION. | ||
<br/ | <br/> | ||
<br/><i>[[Image:paste-1919850381848.jpg]][[Image:paste-2035814498762.jpg]]</i> | <br/><i>[[Image:paste-1919850381848.jpg]][[Image:paste-2035814498762.jpg]]</i> | ||
<br/ | <br/> | ||
<br/><b>Image: | <br/><b>Image: </b>Case courtesy of Dr Andrew Dixon, [https://radiopaedia.org/ Radiopaedia.org]. From the case [https://radiopaedia.org/cases/43305 rID: 43305] [Accessed 18 Apr. 2020]. | ||
==Reference(s)== | ==Reference(s)== |
Latest revision as of 11:29, 1 January 2023
SUMMARY
1. Remember that you do not see the first row of bones - scaphoid & trapezium, but the second row - lunate & capitate.
2. The lunate appears as a moon shaped bone.
3. Important to detect SCAPHO-LUNATE DISLOCATION.
Image: Case courtesy of Dr Andrew Dixon, Radiopaedia.org. From the case rID: 43305 [Accessed 18 Apr. 2020].
Reference(s)
R.M.H McMinn (1998). Last’s anatomy: regional and applied. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone.
Gray, H., Carter, H.V. and Davidson, G. (2017). Gray’s anatomy. London: Arcturus.