Forearm Fracture
What is a forearm fracture?
A fracture is a break in a bone. There are two bones in
your child's forearm:
- the radius (on the thumb side of their arm)
- the ulna (on the little-finger side of their arm).
A child's bones are different than adults in some important
ways. First, the bones of a child are more flexible.
Sometimes the bones crack like green branches from a live
tree instead of snapping like a dry stick. Other times the
bones just buckle slightly. When this happens, the bone is
broken but there isn't a clear fracture line just a slightly
raised area on the outside of the bone. The second major
difference is that a child's bones are still growing. Bones
grow from an area near their ends called the growth plate.
Sometimes fractures occur within the growth plate and can be
difficult to see on an x-ray. Fractures in this area can
effect the growth of the bone and may require special x-rays
or other tests.
How does it occur?
A forearm fracture usually occurs from:
- a fall onto an outstretched arm or hand
- a direct blow to the arm.
What are the symptoms?
The symptoms are pain, swelling, and tenderness at the site
of injury. Your child may not be able to move the arm
normally.
How is it diagnosed?
Your child's health care provider will examine the forearm
and look for tenderness. An x-ray of the arm will show the
fracture.
How is it treated?
- If the broken bone is crooked, your child's health care
provider will straighten it. Your child is given
medicine first so the straightening is not too painful.
Some fractures that cannot be straightened or that are
broken into many pieces may need to have surgery.
- Your child may be given a splint to wear for a few days
until the swelling begins to go down. Then the arm will
be put in a cast for 4 to 8 weeks.
- Your child's health care provider may prescribe
anti-inflammatory medicines or other pain medicines.
- Your child should elevate the arm on a pillow or the back
of a chair as often as possible for the first 2 to 3
days. This will help control pain and swelling.
- Your child may place ice packs over the cast for 20 to 30
minutes every 3 to 4 hours for the first 2 to 3 days.
Take care not to get your cast wet if it is a plaster
cast.
When should I call my health care provider?
Call your child's health care provider if:
- The pain is getting worse instead of better.
- You feel that your child's cast is too tight and they
have swelling that doesn't get better after the arm is
elevated.
Written by Pierre Rouzier, M.D.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2006 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.