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  2. Mallet finger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mallet_finger

    Surgery will put the finger in a neutral position and drill a wire through the distal interphalangeal joint (DIP) to the proximal interphalangeal joint (PIP), forcing immobilization. An example of a splint for mallet finger.

  3. Graham Stack (surgeon) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham_Stack_(surgeon)

    He was the first editor of The Hand, the forerunner of the Journal of Hand Surgery. He devised a splint - known as the Stack Splint - for the management of soft tissue mallet fingers. [5] In 1970, he was elected Hunterian Professor by the Royal College of Surgeons of England. [2]

  4. Splint (medicine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Splint_(medicine)

    Illustration of an Ankle Stirrup Splint Finger splint. Ankle stirrup – Used for the ankles. [2] Finger splints – Used for the fingers. A "mallet" or baseball finger is a rupture of the extensor tendon and sometimes including a fracture. While surgery may be necessary such an injury may heal if placed in a finger splint. [3] Nasal splint [4]

  5. Jammed finger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jammed_finger

    Additional surgery may need to be conducted to properly treat a malunion. [20] As with a dislocation, closed reduction is attempted before open reduction. [19] The finger is then splinted to prevent further injury to the digit as it heals. Splint material and type varies depending on the reduction conducted. [26]

  6. Acquired hand deformity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acquired_hand_deformity

    Mallet finger is acquired due to injury to the thin extensor tendon that functions to straighten the end (DIP) joint of a finger. [8] Jamming of the finger induces a rupture of the extensor tendon or a broken bone at the tendon's site of attachment. [9] This results in a droopy and crooked appearance of the end joint of the finger, resembling a ...

  7. Swan neck deformity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swan_neck_deformity

    Swan neck deformity has many of possible causes arising from the DIP, PIP, or even the MCP joints. In all cases, there is a stretching of the volar plate at the PIP joint to allow hyperextension, plus some damage to the attachment of the extensor tendon to the base of the distal phalanx that produces a hyperflexed mallet finger.

  8. Suzuki frame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzuki_frame

    A suzuki frame being used in the treatment of an injured ring (fourth) finger. The Suzuki frame is a medical device, used for helping heal broken fingers, especially those with deep, complex intra-articular fractures. Rubber bands are used to generate traction between two metal Kirschner wires that are inserted into the bone on either side of a ...

  9. Boutonniere deformity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boutonniere_deformity

    Boutonniere deformity is a deformed position of the fingers or toes, in which the joint nearest the knuckle (the proximal interphalangeal joint, or PIP) is permanently bent toward the palm while the farthest joint (the distal interphalangeal joint, or DIP) is bent back away (PIP flexion with DIP hyperextension).

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