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Child With Dinner Fork Deformity
Joseph R. Kardouni, PT, PhD Annals of Emergency Medicine Volume 67, Issue 2, (February 2016) DOI: /j.annemergmed Copyright © Terms and Conditions
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Figure 1 Dinner fork deformity of the left forearm (arrows).
Annals of Emergency Medicine , DOI: ( /j.annemergmed ) Copyright © Terms and Conditions
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Figure 2 Posteroanterior (left) and lateral (right) radiographs showing distal radius and ulna fracture, with dorsal angulation and displacement of the distal radial fragment (arrows). Annals of Emergency Medicine , DOI: ( /j.annemergmed ) Copyright © Terms and Conditions
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Figure 3 Posteroanterior (left) and lateral (right) radiographs of the reduced fracture (arrows), with the patient in a sugar tong splint. Annals of Emergency Medicine , DOI: ( /j.annemergmed ) Copyright © Terms and Conditions
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Figure 4 Seven weeks after injury, clinical union of the previous fracture on posteroanterior (left) and lateral (right) radiographs, with a radiolucent band between the fracture fragments indicating callus formation (arrows). Annals of Emergency Medicine , DOI: ( /j.annemergmed ) Copyright © Terms and Conditions
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