Barton fracture
Citation, DOI, disclosures and article data
At the time the article was created Frank Gaillard had no recorded disclosures.
View Frank Gaillard's current disclosuresAt the time the article was last revised Yaïr Glick had no financial relationships to ineligible companies to disclose.
View Yaïr Glick's current disclosures- Barton's fracture
- Dorsal type Barton fracture
Barton fractures are fractures of the distal radius. It is also sometimes termed the dorsal type Barton fracture to distinguish it from the volar type or reverse Barton fracture.
Barton fractures extend through the dorsal aspect to the articular surface but not to the volar aspect. Therefore, it is similar to a Colles fracture. There is usually associated dorsal subluxation/dislocation of the radiocarpal joint.
History and etymology
First named by John Rhea Barton (1794-1871), an American orthopedic surgeon working at Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia, United States of America 1.
See also
Quiz questions
References
- 1. Di Matteo B, Tarabella V, Filardo G, Viganò A, Tomba P, Marcacci M. John Rhea Barton: the birth of osteotomy. (2013) Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the ESSKA. 21 (9): 1957-62. doi:10.1007/s00167-013-2387-1 - Pubmed
- 2. Hunter TB, Peltier LF, Lund PJ. Radiologic history exhibit. Musculoskeletal eponyms: who are those guys?. Radiographics. 2000;20 (3): 819-36. Radiographics (full text) - Pubmed citation
- 3. Wrist Fractures: What the Clinician Wants to Know. Radiology. 2001;219 (1): 11-28. Radiology (full text)
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