Elbow (acute flexion AP)

Changed by Craig Hacking, 28 Aug 2018

Updates to Article Attributes

Body was changed:

The elbow acute flexion AP is a modified elbow AP projection for patients whom cannot straighten their arm for examination. It is comprised of two views demonstrating the distal humerus and proximal forearm structures

Patient position

Distal humerus projection
  • patient is seated alongside the table
  • the distal humerus is placed on the image receptor with the arm remaining in flexion 
  • the forearm is supported by a sponge 
  • if possible the hand is supinated
Proximal forearm projection
  • the patient is sat high in relation to the table 
  • the patient then places the posterior aspect of the forearm on the IR 
  • patient may have to stand for this projection 

Technical factors

  • anteroposterior projection
  • centring point
    • distal humerus projection
      • perpendicular the humerus at the level of the elbow joint 
    • proximal forearm projection
      • perpendicular to the forearm at the level of the elbow joint 
  • collimation
    • superior to the distal third of the humerus
    • inferior to include one-third of the proximal radius and ulna
    • lateral to include the skin margin 
    • medial to include medial skin margin 
  • orientation
    • portrait
  • detector size
    • 18 cm x 24 cm
  • exposure
    • 50-60 kVp
    • 2-5 mAs
  • SID
    • 100 cm
  • grid
    • no 

Image technical evaluation

  • distal humerus projection
    • the distal humerus should demonstrate little signs of distortion, with the proximal forearm structures notably foreshortened and distorted
  • proximal forearm projection
    • the proximal forearm structures including the ulna, radial tubercle and radial head should demonstrate little signs of distortion, with the distal humerus notably foreshortened and distorted 

Practical points

This is not a requestion view, rather a modified projection of the AP view and patient positioning is limited by pain/injury. Patients requiring this projection will be in pain, it is important to physically show the projection before asking them to do it. If the patient's elbow is flexed too much for this projection, consider an inferosuperior projection.

  • -</ul><h4>Practical points</h4><p>This is not a requestion view, rather a modified projection of the AP view and patient positioning is limited by pain/injury. Patients requiring this projection will be in pain, it is important to physically show the projection before asking them to do it. If the patient's elbow is flexed too much for this projection, consider an <a title="Elbow (inferosuperior view)" href="/articles/elbow-inferosuperior-view">inferosuperior projection</a>.</p>
  • +</ul><h4>Practical points</h4><p>This is not a requestion view, rather a modified projection of the AP view and patient positioning is limited by pain/injury. Patients requiring this projection will be in pain, it is important to physically show the projection before asking them to do it. If the patient's elbow is flexed too much for this projection, consider an <a href="/articles/elbow-inferosuperior-view">inferosuperior projection</a>.</p>

Systems changed:

  • Musculoskeletal

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