Jonathan Blood Smyth is a Superintendent Physiotherapist at an NHS Hospital in the South-West of the UK. With over 15 years experience of managing orthopaedic conditions and looking after joint replacements, he specializes in managing chronic pain. Visit his site if you are looking for Physiotherapists in London or throughout the UK.
The wrist has a large, three hundred and sixty degree cone of movement facing forwards at the end of the arm, a consequence of the close arrangement of the small carpal bones. Group movements or individual ones between the bones can occur and this allows precise control of the hand, thumb and fingers. The rows are arranged irregularly but in general two of the bones line up with the end of each of the metacarpals. This allows the creation of a line of several joints leading to each finger which enables the separate and flexible movements of the hand.
The wrist bones are a grouping of eight small bones called the carpal bones and which are arranged in two rows between the metacarpals and the ulna and radius of the forearm. From the end row of carpal bones the metacarpals run down the hand to the junction with the phalanges at the knuckles, making a mobile central hand area. Running virtually parallel to each other and being long and narrow the metacarpals can alter their positioning, either becoming flattened to support something large or rotated round to cup the palm for increased grasping ability.
Human hand function is a highly complex process as the thumb, fingers and hand are placed in a precise posture to suit the task being performed, with the wrist performing a pivotal role. The major, less precise, arm positioning is provided by the shoulder and shoulder blade, the body to hand distance is controlled by the elbow, the wrist angle is set by the forearm and the last adjustments of hand position are performed by the wrist. The movements become more precise the closer the joint becomes to the wrist.
The thumb is the most manoeuvrable and astonishing part of the human hand. We possess an "opposable thumb" which is absent from apes and allows us to achieve the high levels of precision movements we require. On the outside of the hand the thumb's metacarpal is not flat in the same plane as the others in the palm but is turned inwards, giving it the function of crossing the palm to allow the thumb to meet the ends of the fingers in gripping. Much of the specialised thumb movement comes from the junction of its carpal and metacarpal bones.
The movements of the carpal bones can be in unison in small amounts as they move together to allow a movement to occur. As the hands move small amplitudes of movement occur between the individual carpal bones and the carpal rows. The metacarpals are able to rotate around their long axes which allows the palm to be curled into a cupped position. As the palm moulds round to assist gripping it also allows the fingers to align so that they can effectively grip at the correct angle. Any loss of the accessory movements of the carpals and metacarpals can reduce the ability of the hand to function adequately.
Wrist function can be adversely affected by heavy work with the hands such as grasping and pulling heavy objects, pulling ropes and using vibrating machinery. When the hand is grasping something firmly the longitudinal forces this generates are very great as the carpal bones are compressed between the metacarpals and the forearm bones. This can cause a reduction in the essential accessory movements of the carpal bones. Forced extension of the wrist may wedge one of the carpal bones, the lunate, slightly forwards which causes pain and disability.
A fall on the outstretched hand (FOOSH) is the most typical reason for the wrist to be extended forcibly and a Colles fracture is a common result where the break is located in the last inch of the radius and ulna near the wrist. Older women are most likely to suffer from this fracture and although most attention is concentrated on the fracture there is often a significant soft tissue injury of the wrist bones as well. The fracture will heal in five or six weeks but pain, weakness and functional difficulty may persist for much longer, related to some extent to the loss of individual movements between the carpal bones.
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By: Jonathan Blood-smyth | 12/11/2009 | HealthThe changes which occur as the knee becomes worrying and develops pain are often due to injury of some kind, perhaps slight. Swelling can occur in the joint after even a minor injury and even a small quantity of fluid in the joint can lead to intricate side effects within the knee.
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